The Duchess: DVD Review

December 30, 2008

Loved this film with its lush, elaborate, bold, scrumptious plot and script and divine costuming. Keira Knightley [Atonement, Pride and Prejudice] does a stellar job as 18th century Duchess of Devonshire, Georgiana [a distant relative to Princess Diana]. At a mere 16-years-old, her parents married her off to the much older Duke of Devonshire, but she was far more interested in politics and sporting events. She liked neither the rules expected of her title nor her boorish husband [the talented Ralph Fiennes [The Reader, The English Patient], quite stuffy in this role]. Not only did her husband ignore her most of the time and make little of her ideas and opinions [she spoke out quite often in mixed company], make demands on her for male heirs [the norm at the time] but he blatantly cheated on her time and again, going so far as having his mistress live in the home with he and the Duchess.

After putting up with his affairs for years and “disappointing” him by giving birth to two daughters, she had an affair of her own with an aspiring politician [Dominic Cooper of Mamma Mia!] who later became Prime Minister. The Duke gave her an impossible choice: give up the guy or her children. Despite the strong-willed, independent nature of the Duchess, she remained devoted to her children.

The Duchess is a delight– an artful piece of film.

GRADE: B+


Steele’s Picks for Best Films of 2008

December 28, 2008

1. Slumdog Millionaire

A magical film and so, so, so brilliant. It’s about dreams and love and never giving up hope. The film, directed by Danny Boyle, is absolutely original, special and imaginative from beginning to end. It is thrilling and lovely and romantic, all wrapped up with a spectacular Bollywood ending.

2. Happy-Go-Lucky

This reminds me a lot of Voltaire’s Candide except that Poppy is [Sally Hawkins] less naive–she knows about the world and its darkness, she just chooses to ignore the evils most of the time– and ends up with less scrapes. She is the ultimate optimist and regardless of the situation she finds herself in she sees it positively.

3. Milk

A moving, inspirational film. Sean Penn [The Interpreter, Mystic River] portrays Harvey Milk in a powerful, profound, commanding performance. He is ebullient and convicted to the end result and wins you over from the first frame. He makes you love Milk right off. He also makes you feel like you are watching a documentary at times. He has the mannerisms and affectations down. And when he’s with his lover, played by the talented James Franco [Pineapple Express, Spider-Man 3], the sex appeal oozes. The duo has smoldering and intense chemistry.

4. Rachel Getting Married

The screenplay, by Sidney Lumet’s daughter Jenny, combined with direction by Jonathan Demme makes this a strong, insightful glimpse into a flawed weekend of one family. Anne Hathaway’s layered performance is dark, moving, unapologetic and brilliant.

5. Vicky Cristina Barcelona

Loved it! Just fantastic. The neuroses, the craziness, and the cast of Scarlet Johansson, Javier Bardem, Penelope Cruz and Rebecca Hall is divine.

6. Wall-E

The messages of caring, compassion, and environmental awareness do not overwhelm the viewer but are clear throughout this heartfelt, inspirational film about a futuristic recycling robot with a penchant for old song and dance films and collecting odd objects like Rubik’s cubes and light bulbs.

7. Mongol

Very, very well made film with wonderful cinematography, fanastic fight scenes and an intense love story. It’s all about the rise to power of Genghis Khan in Mongolia. He overcomes tremendous adversity including losing his father as a young boy, enduring slavery, torment by those in his father’s trust, being betrayed by someone he considered to be a “blood brother,” and numerous prolonged separations from his wife.

8. The Secret Life of Bees

Lovely film with wonderful cast: Queen Latifah, Jennifer Hudson, Dakota Fanning, Alicia Keys and Sophie Odeneko. It’s the 60s and a young girl escapes her abusive father to live with a group of independent minded women in South Carolina who support themselves by making honey.

9. Be Kind Rewind

Be Kind Rewind is a love story to film. It’s also a commentary on the state of big business. We all know how hard in can be to find a copy of a particular, somewhat obscure film and wonder why there are 25 copies oLif something really banal on the shelves. Be Kind Rewind is a gem amidst a lot of mediocrity.

10. Doubt

Shades of gray. Did he or didn’t he? Guilt, right and wrong, convictions, circumstances, hunches, and the hierarchy or the Church all come into play in this powerful, brilliant film based on the Broadway play. In 1964, Sister Aloysius Beauvier [Meryl Streep] and young, naive Sister James [Amy Adams] are rather dutiful sisters in the congregation, while Father Flynn [Phillip Seymour Hoffman] is the priest running the show. Things seen and heard can be easily misinterpreted and who knows who to trust or to believe?


Steele’s Picks for Best Reads of 2008

December 25, 2008

Dream When You’re Feeling Blue by Elizabeth Berg

A group of sisters write to guys during WWII (either boyfriends or just guys who need letters). I cried at the end of this book and promptly got online and adopted a U.S. soldier in Iraq. I wrote to SGT Michael Spaeth for the bulk of this year [and sent quite a few care packages] and his tour recently ended. I just requested a new soldier.

The Great Man by Kate Christensen

Fabulous read about an artist as told, after his death, from the viewpoint of four women: his wife, his lover, the lover’s best friend and his sister, also an artist. The women are all in their late 60s and early 70s and they have vastly different memories and relationships with this man and with each other. When two biographers come around to interview the women it forces them to speak to each other and for a long-standing secret to be revealed. Masterful writing by Christensen.

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

Told in a series of letters this is a charmer. Well-researched and planned, the book covers the period of German occupation of the British Island of Guernsey during WWII and the group of residents who created a book club to thrive and remain active.

Suite Francaise by Irene Nemirovsky

A remarkable, fluid, enthralling book about WWII written by a French Jew (who ended up being shipped off and killed in a concentration camp). It was published some 50 years posthumously. She paints a detailed portrait of the villagers when the Germans invade as well as the mass exodus from Paris. It is funny, sad and quite sympathetic at times toward some of the German soldiers. She seemed to be able to see the situation from all angles and get it down in exquisite prose.

The Cure for the Modern World by Lisa Tucker

Clinical trials, medical research, Big Pharma, medical ethics, children’s rights and much more are explored in this easy-to-read book. It’s a real joy to read it. Perfect weekend read.

Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates

Heartbreaking and beautiful. So well-written. Striving for that “perfect” life in suburbia in the 50s can destroy you.

People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks

Brooks puts you in Sarajevo and London and Venice at all times as she describes the exciting discovery of an ancient Hebrew manuscript with clues as to its travels and its use over time. While based on real events, Brooks creates fantastic characteristics and writes this love story to books and reading and history. I love her style, her research and journalism skills and want to write books just like her when I finally do.

The Garden of Last Days by Andre Dubus II

Once I got into this book, I just could not stop reading. It is about the fictional final days of one of the 9/11 hijackers as he spent them in Florida at a stripclub. It also involves the stripper and some other clubgoers and how their paths cross that evening.

The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway

A haunting, majestic book of epic proportions. Its about the occupation of Sarajevo in the 90s. A cellist decides to play for 22 days honor those who died from a mortar attack. A man travels to collect water. A woman works as a sniper. Another man walks across town to get bread. All risk their lives. Galloway tells their stories with truth, beauty and honesty. One of the best books I’ve read, ever.

The Senator’s Wife by Sue Miller

Fantastic read. Miller is quite the storyteller and wordsmith. She creates this characters that you can imagine knowing, that are so vibrant and complex and real. Her chosen topic fits the times and our nation’s landscape. It’s not what you expect either.

The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion

Pretty amazing piece of work. Writing about an unimaginable event.

The Condition by Jennifer Haigh

This is a page turner about a family from Concord, Mass. who summer on the Cape like so many other well-to-do Massachusetts people. The author weaves together secrets involving Turners syndrome, apoptosis, homosexuality, MIT, the scientific community and families in general. It is so well done.

American Wife by Curtis Sittenfeld

Who would think that a fictionalized book about Laura Bush would be this good and this hard to put down? I really sunk into this book and didn’t want it to end. Sittenfeld did her research and fleshed out her character and made it an enjoyable, wonderful book. I then saw the film W a few weeks later and it made it all that much better for me.

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

Now I know why everyone has been reading this book—from girlfriends to my step-grandmother– and raving about it. Engrossing and imaginative. I read it in one night.

Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri

In this lyrical collection of stories, Lahiri weaves together families and couples and single people and Indian traditions along.

Dewey by Vicky Myron

Delightful and memorable story about a cat and a little library in Middle-America. The cat touches many people in the libary and the community but the book will also enlighten you about Iowa and its people as well as libraries in general.


Gran Torino: Film Review

December 23, 2008

Clint Eastwood directs himself in this film (with a screenplay by Nick Schenk) about an angry Korean War veteran, Walt Kowalski, living in Michigan. The film opens to a funeral scene for Walt’s wife. He growls and grunts as he watches his grand-children entering the church wearing belly-piercings and football jerseys. The strained relationships with his sons and their families are transparent at the gathering post funeral. Later, a young priest, who befriended Walt’s wife, keeps coming around to visit Walt. Walt calls him an “overeducated 27-year-old virgin.” Walt enjoys sitting on his front porch with a cooler of beers, his dog at his side, watching the cars go by. He’s not happy that his neighborhood has turned “ethnic” but he refuses to leave. In his spare time he heads to the VFW to hang with his buddies where they knock a few back and joke around, using all sorts of ethnic slurs in the name of good fun.

What begins as somewhat of a Dirty Harry caricature turns endearing as he bonds with his Hmong neighbors. Though initially he calls them every derogatory name possible and yells at them to stay off his lawn, he cannot help but become enmeshed in their lives. Walt is happy with his insular life until a gang rolls up and comes a bit to close to his house. And then worse, to his prized possession: his mint 1972 Gran Torino. When he sees the daughter, Sue [the delightful and spirited Ahney Her], being harassed out on the street, he drives up and scares some boys away and the two become unlikely friends. He begins to enjoy the companionship of Sue and her relatives. He declares he has more in common with them than “his spoiled family.” The clash of cultures has funny and touching moments. The shared moments with Sue, Thao and their family awakens in Walt something that may have been lost a long time ago. He mentors the young boy of the family, Thao [played honestly and even-tempered by Bee Vang]. He treats him like a son and teaches him to fix things and use tools and get a job as a construction worker. Then heroically, ingeniously saves him from a gang. It’s a heartwarming film that I highly recommend.

STEELE SAYS: SEE IT IN THE THEATRE


American Teen: DVD Review

December 20, 2008

Paramount Home Entertainment
for sale exclusively at Target

Director Nanette Burstein [The Kid Stays in the Picture] decided to bring her camera to middle-American, the “real America” [as we so often were reminded during this past election] to spend ten months in the lives of five seniors in a small town Indiana high school. American Teen allows us to observe the jock, geek, prom queen, rebel, and heartthrob navigate the halls of Warsaw High School during the all-important senior year– a year for change, introspection, and decision making.

High school is a difficult time, made only more complicated by technology [as evidenced in American Teen by an unfortunate incident involving a picture texted from a girl to a boy and subsequently emailed throughout the school]. Sure, I found American Teen rather absorbing but it did not move me as much as other documentaries involving high-schoolers such as Hoop Dreams, Country Boys or Devil’s Playground. If you are under 21 and watch this film, it might seem stressful and daunting. If you are over 30, you will reminisce about some of the ridiculous worries, stresses and griefs high school caused.

While Warsaw is painted as a small town there are a plethora of school activities of which many inner-city school would be envious. Warsaw does not seem to lack in school activities: prom, yearbook, a radio and television station, school paper, sports teams, band, cheerleading, and many other after-school activities. Many schools have had athletic and other extra-curricular activities (and music and art) cut from their curriculums. I don’t think the high school experience here is all that different than that of many suburban high schools. They are driving distance to Chicago, at least.

Colin, the awkward, pimple-faced, goofy jock with middling grades possesses just okay hoop skills. His only hope for college seems to be a basketball scholarship and this season has not been his best. Before a game, his father tells him he “better get those rebounds otherwise it’s the army.” You can see the pressure in his face after every game as he does worse and worse. It’s pretty sad to see this guy hunched on the bench in the locker room after another lousy game.

Band geek Jacob has terrible acne and is extremely shy and obsessed with having a girlfriend. He spends hours playing video games especially one where he creates fantasies where he runs off with the girl in the end. He dates more than I did in high school. He goes after the new freshman in town. She is also in the band. But soon another guy in the band is making moves on her and she needs to “meet new people and enjoy high school.” He seems to find a connection with a girl he met in Chicago at a wedding. Why all the stress though kid?

A straight-haired blonde, with J. Crew wardrobe, is the popular Megan. She lists about a dozen activities in which she is involved including yearbook, cheerleading, the activities planning committee, and swim team. She plans to go to Notre Dame like her father and most of her siblings and to major in pre-med. Megan seems like the perfect student/all-around girl but she is the ringleader to the most cruel and childish activities of the entire film from crank phone calls to toilet-papering houses to spray painting “fag” on a fellow student council member’s door.

The self-proclaimed “liberal in a conservative town”, Hannah, the vintage-clad “rebel” alternative chick, loves music, art, film and photography, and wants to move to California to study film. Hannah is the most likeable girl in the film and the one most likely to succeed. You want her to get out of town and make something of herself. She paints and rocks out to cool music and hangs out with her buddy and doesn’t seem to care that much about what others think until she goes home and breaks down or doesn’t show up at school for weeks. You want to shake her and tell her it is not her, it is just high school and once she gets out of her 20s she will understand. This is an awkward phase that everyone must go through and learn from. Her mom is bipolar and Hannah is a bit depressed as well.

Then there’s the heartthrob Mitch, a cute blonde basketball player with a guilty smile. He has it pretty easy because everyone finds him so attractive. We discover he’s had a crush on someone outside his circle for years: the class “rebel”: Hannah They date and for the short time they do, it’s sweet and in each other, I think they find out a bit about themselves until he brings her to a party with his insecure friends and then breaks up with her via a text message the next day. Weak. Shallow.


Jacob might sum it best: My life sucks right now but what if it’s even worse after high school? I’m afraid of what’s going to happen to me.

Though Burstein does her best to find a jock, a geek, a prom queen, rebel, and heartthrob, this is not the real life version of The Breakfast Club. These kids never attempt to find any common ground, never want to know each other, can’t get away from each other fast enough and never can see the world from each other’s perspectives even for five minutes. This might happen at their five- or ten- or twenty-year high school reunions, but kids in high school are too insecure and too self-absorbed, no matter how popular or how cool they may seem to anyone.

Anyone who makes it out of high school knows what happens after high school. Things might get worse and better and worse again but it is never as bad as high school. Why? People learn. People grow. People move on. We hope. Those that stagnate and hold on to the glory days of high school never succeed.

Grade: B


Steele’s Picks for Best Music of 2008

December 18, 2008

Death Cab for Cutie, Narrow Stairs
poetic, romantic. my favorite band right now

Juliana Hatfield, How to Walk Away
sweet and moody tunes.

Keane, Perfect Symmetry
smooth and deliciously melodic

Goldfrapp, Seventh Tree
trance. ethereal. The stuff I love and cannot listen to enough.

Alanis Morrissette, Flavors of Entanglement
less angry, still edgy

Dido, Safe Trip Home
great comfort in Dido’s voice and her songwriting for me. as if she gets me or she’s been through similar things.

Conor Oberst, Conor Oberst
brilliant singer/songwriter with something about his voice. I like to listen before I go to bed. it’s so sexy and soothing.

Sia, Some People Have Real Problems
impressive range. intuitive, creative, eclectic arrangements.

Stereolab, Chemical Chords
the mix of the electronica and french vocals always sounds cool for them.

Amy MacDonald, This is the Life
catchy and moving. great voice.

She and Him, Vol. One
Swirly bittersweet.

R.E.M., Accelerate
a cross between Green and Life’s Rich Pageant.

Coldplay, Viva La Vida
the band doesn’t disappoint with exquisite ballads and sweeping guitar crescendos

Paramore, Riot!
catchy, crisp

Alicia Keys, As I Am
so talented. a strong girl with glorious vocals

Stephen Malkmus and the Jicks, Real Emotional Trash
pure poetry. Stephen Malkmus has a beautiful, world-weary yet hopeful voice.

Snow Patrol, A Hundred Million Suns
still one of my top fave bands. a bit haunting, a bit dreamy, somewhat hypnotic at times.

The Submarines, Honeysuckle Weeks
harmonizing peace and love

The Weepies, Hideaway
mellow and a bit casual, “down home” feel

The Raveonettes, Lust Lust Lust
upbeat and gloriously propelling


Steele’s Picks for Best Television of 2008

December 16, 2008

With all these shows, it might seem like I watch hours of television but with TiVo, I can whip through a lot, plus I watched The Wire and Californication (premium cable shows) on DVD and some other shows I like pile up and save for a rainy day…like Army Wives.

Pushing Daisies
This whimsical show just makes me smile so much from beginning to end. It’s so delightful in its storytelling.

Project Runway
Fashion designers+Heidi Klum+Tim Gunn=addictive

Chelsea Lately
Love her sharp wit and snappy remarks, her honesty and the roundtable at the beginning.

Mad Men
Brilliant writing, concept, cast, acting, styling.

The Wire
Gritty, complicated, compelling and intense.

House
Switching up the cast seemed risky and I didn’t think I could get used to it but this season has finally smoothed out and the episodes are back to top form.

The New Adventures of Old Christine
Hysterical. Love Julia Louis-Dreyfus.

Samantha Who?
Didn’t catch the first season but I think this show is very funny. Christina Applegate is fantastic.

Hopkins
followed residents at Johns Hopkins University hospital in Baltimore

My Boys
I really like this show. Jordana Spiro is wonderful as PJ. I just started this show a few weeks ago and I’m hooked. The cadence is great, the writing sharp and observant of single and married 30-somethings.

Army Wives
Can’t help it and darn it if this show doesn’t get me teared up every episode! I like to watch a bunch in a row.

Californication
David Duchovny (who I loved in X-Files and just loved X-Files period) is sexy, raw and supremely beguiling. Well-written and so accurate about writing, writers and Hollywood.

Cranford on PBS
Delicious PBS miniseries based on novels by Mary Gaskell. Cranford is a town where women hold the power.

Swingtown (guilty summer pleasure)

Survivor: Fans vs. Favorites
Mainly because I liked the crew from Survivor: China and Survivor: Cook Islands, the only seasons of Survivor I watched. And have a major crush on Ozzie.

Miss Austen Regrets on PBS


Milk: Film Review

December 10, 2008

When gay rights continue to be threatened today, a film about a 1970s gay rights pioneer is important to see. Unfortunately it will not reach the audiences that it needs to reach most. Here in Massachusetts, we have gay marriage. In California, where Harvey Milk fought for gay rights so ardently, gays have had their civil rights taken away and now are fighting Prop 8 (the recent vote against gay marriage). This should be merely a historical film but it cuts into today’s political climate as much now as it did then. It saddens me. I saw the film with my close friend who happens to be gay. We saw it in liberal Brookline at the Coolidge Corner theatre. During classes we took together there was an early undercurrent of “is he or isn’t he gay?” and I just don’t see why this type of discussion still exists or needs to exist today. Why does who someone chooses to have sex with really matter in the end? More importantly, why should society and the government care so much?

At 40-years-old, Harvey Milk lamented that he hadn’t done anything with his life and after looking around his neighborhood and realizing he had a chance to make a difference, he threw himself into politics. He vigilantly worked against many against many anti-gay initiatives. His effervescent personality, resiliency and perseverance (he ran for office four times) paid off when he finally became elected to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and the first openly gay elected politician, in 1977. Everyone seemed to like him and he developed a huge grassroots following. During his short time in office, he managed to pass a major gay rights ordinance for San Francisco. Milk and Mayor George Moscone were assassinated by disgruntled former San Francisco supervisor Dan White.

Sean Penn [The Interpreter, Mystic River] portrays Milk in a powerful, profound, commanding performance and will most likely be nominated for an Academy award. He is ebullient and convicted to the end result and wins you over from the first frame. He makes you love Milk right off. He also makes you feel like you are watching a documentary at times. He has the mannerisms and affectations down. And when he’s with his lover, played by the talented James Franco [Pineapple Express, Spider-Man 3], the sex appeal oozes. The duo has smoldering and intense chemistry. James Brolin [W, No Country for Old Men] as Dan White and Emile Hirsch [Into the Wild] as Milk’s protege Cleve Jones, are outstanding as well. First-time screenwriter Dustin Lance Black weaves a compelling script, while director Gus Van Sant [Elephant, Good Will Hunting] scores another convincing, provocative film that delves into a difficult, emotional subject.

Milk is a moving, inspirational film. The gay rights movement, starting around 1970, piggybacked on the civil rights movement, and is equally as historical. Though there are not as many big names attached to the movement or memorable speeches or seminal/blood shed moments. Being openly gay and advancing the rights of gays not only in California but throughout the country by making people realize that being gay wasn’t something that should hold them back or allow them to be discriminated against. He created legislature against such discrimination. Harvey Milk began every speech saying, “My name is Harvey Milk and I’m here to recruit you.” He had a “platform”, so to speak,” of getting people to come out to their families, friends, and co-workers. That is his legacy.

Dubbing himself the Mayor of Castro Street, Milk had charisma. He declared that it was “not just issues. This is our lives we are fighting for.” And that it was never just gay rights but human rights. Harvey Milk understood the big picture long before others did and longer before many more will.

–Amy Steele [12.10.2008]

STEELE SAYS: SEE IT IN THE THEATRE


The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo: book review

December 1, 2008


Finally got around to this book after hearing much buzz about it for a while. I grabbed it from the library’s speed read shelf before the holiday and read in a few days. It’s not too simple but not terribly complicated either. Stieg Larsson was a talented writer and knowledgeable about his material. He details Nazi associations, investigative journalism, private investigation and security firms. It delves into the financial media, a wealthy Swedish family and and forty year-old unsolved mystery. A sixteen-year-old family member disappeared and the patriarch enlists a journalist to look into the case.

Mikael Blomkvist has become entangled in a libel suit and his professional future is bleak. He’s contacted by Mr. Vanger regarding this family case. There’s more to it than that as Vanger knows something about Blomkvist and everyone feels they can help each other monetarily and otherwise. There’s also an intriguing young woman who has tattoos and is the best private investigator in the country and get can information about anyone at anytime. Lisbeth Salander is also damaged and barely trusts anyone and this case will be way more personal than she may be able to every handle but will also bring her and Blokvist very close. While the crimes are cold, chilling, creepy and frightening, Larsson deftly writes the story and keeps you turning the book’s pages.


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