Archive for category DVD
Three Documentaries I HIGHLY recommend that are about women and created by women
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film on August 12, 2013
Venus and Serena
Somehow I never knew Venus and Serena Williams grew up in Compton, California. So extra accolades to them for succeeding as they have. The documentary shows early interview and stock footage as well as current interview footage. As with 99% of successful professional athletes the sisters missed out on a lot growing up. But I think they’ve made up for lost time and don’t seem to have missed out on youthful silliness plus they had each other. Their days revolved around tennis and school. It’s also wonderful to see the tight bonds between Venus and Serena as well as with their mom, dad (now divorced) and their sisters and family members. These are remarkable, spirited and giving women who adore tennis and don’t intend to retire any time soon. Venus and Serena are trailblazers for women in sports and African-American women in sports.
Orgasm Inc.
70% of women need direct clitoral stimulation to orgasm. A sex shop owner said that many women don’t even know how to find their clitoris. Blame it on a lack of sex education. Big pharmaceutical companies and medical industries developed Viagra for men and now want to capitalize on a fabricated women’s “disease” called female sexual dysfunction (FSD). Women have long been programmed to believe that not achieving an orgasm through intercourse indicates something flawed.
Director Liz Canner exposes this greedy, disruptive and manipulative process in the intelligent and disturbing Orgasm, Inc. The company Vivus, planning to develop an orgasm cream for women, hired Canner to create erotic videos to aid in the clinical trial phase. Canner spent nine years researching the pharmaceutical and medical industries and their relationships to female pleasure. These big pharma companies wanted to be the first to develop products to treat FSD. They would make tons of money but the side-effects and risks outweigh the benefits. Still, many “sex experts” such as Laura Berman, PhD work with pharma companies to publicize their drugs. You know all the drug commercials we’re bombarded with on television and in magazines? Ronald Reagan signed the direct-to-consumer advertising law. Only the United States and New Zealand allow direct-to-consumer advertising by pharmaceutical companies. It’s rather sad if you really contemplate it. People see the commercials and a seed gets planted that something might be wrong with them that can be cured with a pill. It’s just not that simple in our fast-paced, high stress environment. She receives a whopping $75, 000/ day.
Canner approaches the topic in a refreshing manner. She speaks to clinical researchers, sex educators, scholars, activists and a variety of women. Orgasm, Inc. is a compelling and thoroughly researched documentary. It’s a must-see.
Searching for Debra Winger
Rosanna Arquette’s documentary on women in film. Amazing and very honest commentary from stars from Gwyneth Paltrow to Whoopi to Vanessa Redgrave to Selma Hayek to Charlotte Rampling to of course Debra Winger. It’s great that these women feel comfortable with age but sad to see the frustration and that there still is the issue of great roles for women over 30. Instead of the wife, the girlfriend and that women have to make a choice of career or family, many making only one film per year. There’s a discussion by a group of 30somethings including Martha Plimpton and Samantha Mathis that televison roles are actually better these days which is a huge flip from the past, film actors never went to tv and also focusing on the stage. And then sadly they talked about many directors and producers wanting to find the “fuckibility factor.” Patricia Arquette spoke of an inappropriate producer and how she had to do a sex scene for “Human Nature” and asked that he not be there and was told he wasn’t, found out he was and pulled the director aside and told him he had a lot to learn and for a scene like that she needed to feel safe and he blew it.
Choice Quotes: Before Sunrise/ Before Sunset
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film on June 6, 2013
in anticipation of Before Midnight, the third film from director Richard Linklater and Julie Delpy (Celine) and Ethan Hawke (Jesse), I re-watched Before Sunrise and Before Sunset.
I kinda see love as this escape for two people who don’t want to be alone.
–Jesse
Isn’t everything we do in life a way to be loved a little more.
–Celine
Why do you think people think relationships are supposed to last forever?
–Jesse
We have these innate set points and nothing much changes our disposition.
–Jesse
To truly communicate with people is really hard to do.
–Celine
Choice Quotes: Dark Horse
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film on April 26, 2013
“I should stop trying to slit my wrists. give up on a literary career, hope, ambition, independence, self-respect. I should just get married and have children.”
“Nothing wrong with living with your parents. It’s how most of the world lives. It’s just us Westerners who are fucked up about it.”
Women’s History Month: Biopics about Women Writers
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film, Women/ feminism on March 8, 2013
Black Butterflies [2011]
Director: Paula van der Oest
Starring: Carice van Houten, Liam Cunningham, Rutger Hauer
–about the volatile life of South African poet Ingrid Jonker
Sylvia [2003]
Starring: Gwyneth Paltrow, Daniel Craig
Director: Christine Jeffs
–focuses on relationship between poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes
Iris [2001]
Starring: Judi Densch, Jim Broadbent, Kate Winslet
Director: Richard Eyre
–lifelong romance between novelist Iris Murdoch and her husband John Bayley from their days as students through her battle with Alzheimer’s disease
Becoming Jane [2007]
Starring: Anne Hathaway
Director: Julian Jarrold
–pre-fame Jane Austen and her romance with a young Irishman
Miss Potter [2006]
Starring: Renee Zellweger, Ewan McGregor, Emily Watson
Director: Chris Noonan
–Beatrix Potter, the author of the beloved and best-selling children’s book, “The Tale of Peter Rabbit”
The Children of the Century [1999]
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Benoit Magimel
Director: Diane Kurys
–love affair between novelist George Sand and author Alfred de Musset
Mrs. Parker and the Viscous Circle [1994]
Starring: Jennifer Jason Leigh, Cambell Scott, Peter Gallagher
Director: Alan Rudolph
–Dorothy Parker and her heyday with the Algonquin Round Table circle of friends
Impromptu [1991]
Starring: Judy Davis, Hugh Grant, Mandy Patinkin
Director: James Lapine
–writer George Sand pursues pianist/composer Frederic Chopin in 1830s France
An Angel at My Table [1990]
Starring: Kerry Fox, Alexia Keogh, Karen Fergusson
Director: Jane Campion
–Janet Frame grows up with lots of brothers and sisters in a poor family in 1920s and 1930s New Zealand. She always feels different from others. After getting education as a teacher, she’s sent to a mental institution for eight years. She gains success when she begins writing novels.
Celebrate Women’s History Month: biopics about kick-ass, inspirational women
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film, Women/ feminism on March 3, 2013
Erin Brockovich [2000]
starring: Julia Roberts, Aaron
directed by: Steven Soderbergh
–Brockovich fought against the US West Coast energy corporation Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E) which knew it had been contaminating a small town’s water supply with with hexavalent chromium leading to cancer
The Whistleblower [2010]
starring: Rachel Weisz
directed by: Larysa Kondracki
–a Nebraska cop, serving as a U.N. peacekeeper in post-war Bosnia, outs the U.N. for covering up a sex scandal.
Dangerous Minds [1995]
starring: Michelle Pfeiffer
–an ex-Marine starts teaching at at an inner-city school and ends up changing her students’ lives forever
Conviction [2010]
starring: Hilary Swank, Sam Rockwell, Minnie Driver
director: Tony Goldwyn
writer: Pamela Gray
–a single mom puts herself through law school in order to represent her brother who’s been wrongfully convicted of murder
Gorillas in the Mist [1988]
starring: Sigourney Weaver, Bryan Brown, Julie Harris
director: Michael Apted
–story of Dian Fossey, a scientist who came to Africa to study the vanishing mountain gorillas, and later fought to protect them
Remembering Malcolm X [1925-1965]
Posted by Amy Steele in Books, DVD, TV on February 21, 2013
civil rights activist Malcolm X was assassinated on this day in 1965
READ:
The Autobiography of Malcolm X [as told to Alex Hailey]
SEE:
Malcolm X [a Spike Lee film]
Betty & Coretta on Lifetime
–Mary J. Blige stars as Dr. Betty Shabazz, wife of Malcolm X and Angela Bassett stars as Coretta Scott King, wife of Martin Luther King, Jr. It’s a lot to pack into 90 minutes and starting in the middle can be rather confusing for those unfamiliar with civil rights history or with Malcolm X or MLK. These are strong, smart women. Although there’s an initial rivalry between the women and an animosity between the men and their opposing messages– Malcolm X wanted to use “any means necessary” to fight the system and MLK spoke out for civil disobedience– this film is about the women’s friendship after the assassinations of their husbands. Betty Shabazz earned her doctorate and taught. Coretta King worked tirelessly for the national holiday recognizing her husband.
HEAR:
Academy Award nominees for Best Documentary on DVD
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film on February 17, 2013
four of the five Academy Award nominees for Best Documentary are available on DVD or Netflix instant. The other nominated film The Gatekeepers isn’t out on DVD yet and isn’t in any theaters in my area so I’ve not been able to see it.
Searching for Sugar Man
–heartwarming, amazing film about a talented, somewhat mysterious Detroit musician named Rodriguez who made brilliant music in the 70s. His musical career didn’t take off as expected. As Rodriguez moved on with his life as a tradesman and raised his daughters, his music became immensely popular in South Africa–his albums sold millions and he inspired many during Apartheid. What happened to him? Where is he now?
5 Broken Cameras
–“It takes strength to turn anger into something positive,” says Emad the filmmaker in 5 Broken Cameras. Later he remarks: “I film to heal.” Potent comments.
–Emad and his family live off the land in Bil’in in Palenstine. They pick olives. They don’t have regular jobs or fixed incomes. The IDF comes to take their land, to build a barrier. Bil’in represents nonviolent resistance. Even Israeli activists join in with the Palestinians to stop this. It’s an engrossing, powerful and inspiring documentary.
The Invisible War
–infuriating film about the military’s dirty little secret until now– sexual assaults among active military personnel that often don’t get prosecuted within the military
–20% of female military veterans have been sexually assaulted. 33% didn’t report it because the report was a friend of the rapist. 25% didn’t report because report was the rapist.
How to Survive a Plague
–this is the story of civil disobedience. the story of how the gay community organized for change when HIV/AIDS killed people at frightening high rates because there were no treatments. drugs weren’t being distributed fast enough in the United States. It’s powerful, provocative and an important part of our cultural history.
Choice Quote: film
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD on October 22, 2012
Choice Quote: Lola Versus
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film on October 14, 2012
“I feel like men are always looking for something better and women are just looking for whatever works.”
“I’m taken. By myself. I’ve just gotta do me for a while.”
–Lola Versus
choice quote: film
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD, Film, Music on October 8, 2012
“Or they’re like me, they’re on Ambien and hair dye.”
— James William Lindberg [ex-Pennywise/ The Black Pacific]
The Other F Word






































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