That Evening Sun: DVD review

August 31, 2010

Abner: You even walk like it.
Alonzo: What?
Abner: White trash. It amuses me.

In That Evening Sun, Abner Meecham (Hal Holbrook) takes off from an assisted-living facility and returns to his Tennessee farm. Once there, he finds that his son has leased it to a man he has never liked, Alonzo Choat (Ray McKinnon). Abner sets up in the caretaker’s cottage out back and schemes how to get Alonzo and his family to move out. Meanwhile, convinced the farm now belongs to him, Alonzo seethes with resentment at Abner’s return. An ominous air fills each scene as two generations battle it out over land rights. Verbal threats soon escalate to more violent, bitter acts. Directed by Scott Teems, That Evening Sun focuses on an elderly man who has no intention to become a pushover. He is that stereotypical grumpy old man. He’s a widower and seems very bitter except when we see him dreaming about his wife [played in warm, artful dream sequences by the late Dixie Carter]. Choat is an awful, drunk red neck loser who cannot pay the rent. But in reality, this could be just the result of the economy and be a very real and painful situation. Does the audience emphasize with him? Not easily when he beats his daughter and treats his wife like dirt. That Evening Sun reflects today’s economic time: the strains to find work; to keep a family together and to stay sane. The film unfolds like an evening in the South: slow and sprawling.

Grade: B

That Evening Sun is out on DVD September 7.

buy at Amazon:
That Evening Sun


Vegetarian recipes: super-easy cold lentil salad

August 30, 2010

** recipe modified from the October 2009 issue of Vegetarian Times

1 cup green lentils, rinsed
1/2 cup frozen peas, thawed
1/2 cup frozen corn, thawed
1 can chick peas
1 cup peeled and diced cucumber
1 tsp dried dill
salad dressing: I used Brianna’s The New American vinaigrette

Bring 3c. water and lentils to boil. Reduce heat to medium-low and cook until lentils are tender [about 20 min.]

Stir lentils, peas, corn, chick peas, diced cucumber and dried dill together.

Stir in salad dressing.


The Back-Up Plan: OUT on DVD [released 8.24]

August 30, 2010

Opening scene: Zoe is freaking out because she hadn’t gotten a pedi to go to her OB/GYN.
Doctor says: “I’m not looking at your toes. I’m looking at your cervix.”

Of course as there are few original films out, The Back-Up Plan is a remake of 1995′s A Modern Affair with Stanley Tucci and Lisa Eichhorn. Zoe [Jennifer Lopez] has always wanted a baby although she thought she’d do so the “traditional” way with a husband. The day that she is artificially inseminated– and her artificial insemination takes the FIRST go-around. I’d like to know how often that happens– she and Stan [Alex O’Loughlin], an organic farmer, meet-cute in a cab. The pair are smitten but of course the pregnancy *may* complicate things.

It’s that Hollywood Rom-Com theory –once you give up on guys and make your own plan to have a child without a guy involved– you get involved with a guy. But it’s also that fairytale world where everything falls together in the end. All your dreams magically come true.

Mona, her friend with four children, tells her her boobs will look like tube socks and then says she doesn’t even want to tell what it will do to bladder. So supportive. When Zoe shops for baby supplies she’s totally overwhelmed by everything. Zoe skeptically attends a class called Single Mothers. She laments: “Thought I’d have kids by now. Guess it’s time from my back-up plan.” There’s a water birth in the film– great to show it– however it turns into a cliched joke with women beating drums and tons of screaming when I think it’s supposed to be much more peaceful. It’s chaotic and psychotic.

The Back-Up Plan contains plenty of slapstick moments and even a few bathroom humor jokes. Stan goes to kiss Zoe on their first date and spills red wine on her new dress. The table is set on fire. She grabs a hose and gets him soaked and then they have a water fight. Zoe goes to tell her nana that she’s pregnant and of course the lady can’t hear her and then those she’s walking with yell: “She’s pregnant, turn up your hearing aid!” On date two, Stan invites Zoe away for the weekend to see his farm. She drives in and sees him shirtless on tractor and crashes her car. Ugh ugh. Sexist/ body image alert: Zoe struggle to get dressed for a fancy event and can barely squeeze herself into dress and Stan says “Do you have a jacket?” Once at the event, she stands in the mirror looking at herself while sucking in her stomach.

The Back-Up Plan is not surprising at all but very predictable. I also think it’s so unrealistic that they have two dates and are starting to envision a life together. Does that really happen because in all my dating, it has never happened to me. Another sexist moment: When admitting to her friend she’s falling for this guy, she thinks about being a “barefoot” stay-at-home mom. The script is written by Kate Angelo [What About Brian] which appalls me. How can a woman write such a banal script? But then I think about Tina Fey’s insidious Baby Mama.

Jennifer Lopez is charming, laid back and naturally glowing. Lopez and O’Loughlin have a low-key, effortless chemistry. Lopez needs better material like Out of Sight.


MUSIC: Scissor Sisters at House of Blues, Boston

August 29, 2010

one of the best concerts I’ve EVER seen.
–high energy
–amazing stage presence & performance
–impressive crowd interaction
–happy atmosphere


Bee vs. Moth, Acronyms: music review

August 28, 2010

Bee vs. Moth is a funky instrumental outfit. The latest release, Acronyms, provides the perfect music for a party, dancing, a quiet dinner. The band’s range is majestic, invigorating and hip. There’s surf instrumental ["Peter Benko"], alt-jazz ["Pennies from Hell"], circus tinged ["ICP on Parade"], country twang ["Now More Than Ever"] and old film noir ["The Sky and The Dirt Earth"]. Acronyms is a party album to be played in its entirety. It’s fabulous.

Bassist Philip Moody and drummer Sarah Norris started Bee vs. Moth and began performing around Austin six years ago. The band has since grown into a five-piece ensemble.

Acronyms will be released September 6 on Aggraveire Music

Bee vs. Moth website


Overloaked DVDS: Bug and Half Nelson

August 28, 2010

Aggie [Ashley Judd] is a waitress at a lesbian club in Oklahoma. She is all “stay away/ don’t mess with me” tough on the outside and vulnerable/ “I’ll crack at any moment” on the inside. Ashley Judd plays these types of characters with such an innate ability to give the audience something from a dismal character. Aggie has a lousy ex-husband [Harry Connick, Jr.] who has just gotten released from jail. She lost her son a decade ago. She bemoans her “miserable existence of laundromats, grocery stores, marriages and lost children.”

Bug literally crawls under your skin and takes hold of your mind as you figure out what is it about this film. This dim setting is not likable or relatable. At first, it just pricks you, then it burrows.This woman is so lonely that she asks a Gulf War veteran [Michael Shannon] she just met to stay with her? Are we to believe this? Turns out he spent years in a hospital [in the mental ward of course] and believes he was tested on.

The acting and story makes it credible and the film quickly turns into a paranoid vision of terror and oblivion. The sighting of a bug turns into a big cover-up, an issue of trust or consequences and a genuine fear. It connects bugs to the CIA, the military, Unabomber Ted Kaczynski, Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh and Jim Jones Temple’s People! Sometimes funny and sometimes downright creepy and bizarre, Bug is not a film for everyone (the other two people in the theater with me did not like it). I laughed out loud at the absurdity and cringed at the possibilities. It is that effective and completely original.

And Ashley Judd. I don’t know what to say about this phenomenal actor. I love every film she does, every role she takes. She would be a dream to interview. This gorgeous, self-assured woman is able to become the most desperate of characters [please put Come Early Morning on your netflix queue]. She delves in and does not let go. She embodies this icky, questionable woman and makes her complex and layered. Aggie is a survivor.

It is not that Bug is super deep or philosophic or existential. At the beginning I was even thinking “what is going on?” and then bang! It blows up and out and over and it’s fantastic.

Bug is just a satisfyingly good psychological thriller.

buy at Amazon: Bug (Special Edition)

In Half Nelson, first time feature film director Ryan Fleck presents a metaphor for life’s challenges. This wrestling hold puts you in a compromised position and it is difficult to release from it. A drug-addicted junior high school teacher (a subtle and focused Ryan Gosling) forms a strong friendship with one of his students, Drey (Shareeka Epps). The end result is a somber yet realistic story.

In this role, the talented Gosling (The Notebook, The United States of Leland) turns in a quietly moving, haunting, riveting performance as this intelligent teacher who finds himself stagnated and questioning his impact on society. It is entirely relatable.

Who has not felt that way at one point? Why do I do this job? Do I matter as one individual in the overall schematics of the world? Everyone else seems to be moving along, as one should. People seem happy, settled, and comfortable. The inner-city characters are real. He plans to write a book but never gets around to starting it. His ex-girlfriend is engaged. His parents reminisce about their glory days protesting Vietnam and other issues of the 60s. During a family dinner, the mom even puts on “Free to Be You and Me” while getting drunk and dancing around with her sons. Even his students are more focused than him. Drey learns of his secret double life and forms an alliance. She’s wise beyond her years, being a latch key kid and having an older brother in lock-up.

Epps makes a solid, innately natural first-time acting debut. Fleck interposes quiet moments with quick hand-held camera shots to weave the story. His directorial approach is entirely effective as the ending is left open, allowing filmgoers to leave the theatre in deep thought or in intense conversation regarding the numerous provocative elements within the film-Dan faces the difficulties of making a difference, of advancing one’s life and of doing enough.

Dan is a fully functional crackhead, has a novel teaching approach and is a favorite among his pupils. Yet he has many dark, insular days and darker nights. He is a troubled soul that cannot often get out of his own mind or change the sheets on the bed.

Half Nelson starts slow but is gritty and honest in its portrayal of a flawed individual who strives toward living the good life.

buy at Amazon: Half Nelson


Almost Dead: book review

August 27, 2010

Title: Almost Dead
Author: Assaf Gavron
ISBN: 978-0061984044
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Harper Perennial (April 13, 2010)
Category: contemporary fiction
Review source: publisher
Rating: B

Eitan: New forces were taking control of my life and I couldn’t, or perhaps didn’t want to, avoid them. Here came the offers and the pressures, the strangers and the advisers . . . every day I was approached by people I’d never talked to who knew what I needed, or who needed to know what I thought. Could I lend my voice, my support, my opinion? It didn’t matter to them that, in most cases, I had no opinion.

Almost Dead is a witty, sarcastic gem of a novel about day to day life in Israel with mass chaos going on: suicide bombing, border patrol. Author Assaf Gavron takes on both sides with equal parts candor, empathy and ridiculousness. On one side there’s Eitan “Croc” Einoch who survives three suicide bombings in one week and becomes a national celebrity. Fahmi Sabih lies in a coma. Through his conscience and dreams we learn about this young man who may not quite be committed to the Jihad– at least not nearly as much as his brother. When reading Almost Dead, it’s impossible to choose one side. Both have compelling reasons to choose their paths. Gavron delves into Gaza, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, religious Israelis and Palestinians and some that are fairly agnostic. What will it take to co-exist in one desert area? Gavron writes in a winning conversational manner. Almost Dead will make you think for days after finishing it.

buy at Amazon:
Almost Dead: A Novel


MUSIC video: Too Many Miracles by Badly Drawn Boy

August 25, 2010

new album– It’s What I’m Thinking Pt. 1 – Photographing Snowflakes– out in October

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website

listen to this lovely, introspective song:


MUSIC: Eclectic FALL releases

August 24, 2010

Voxhaul Broadcast, Timing Is Everything

–if you like Brandon Flowers and/or The Killers, you’ll like Voxhaul Broadcast and its indie pop

listen here: Leaving on the 5th

Bee vs. Moth, Acronyms
release date: September 6

–jazz-infused, twangy instrumental. pretty funky stuff.


Sungod, First Matter
release date: September 7

–if you’re into long psychedelic instrumental, this Austin band should do it for you.


Sarah Sample, Someday Someday
release date: October 12

–achingly stunning folk-pop


Julie Christmas, The Bad Wife
release date: November 9

–near chills from Julie’s whispery/locked in a cage combo of innocence and angst.

listen here: July 31st


Choice Quote: Magical Thinking by Augusten Burroughs

August 23, 2010

Let the people who want to have kids, have them. And let the rest of us spend the extra money on ourselves. Being gay doesn’t make you a bad person. Not wanting kids doesn’t make you a bad person.


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