One of my (many) peculiarities is my willingness (joy) at using literally anything as a bookmark. Janet is much more likely to gather up free bookmarks at bookstores (like the motherlode we picked up yesterday afternoon at Bear Pond Bookstore in Montpelier), whereas I'll make use of just about anything; favorites would include: foreign currency, tickets to get into the Taj Mahal, plane tickets, etc. Yesterday I was putting a final gloss on my Ramayana chapter when the following restaurant receipt fell out of my copy of the Ayodhyakanda. I suppose, as I fast approach a major bookmark, that is my retirement, it would make sense that I found it oddly moving. An Indian epic definitely deserved an Indian receipt.
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Bookmarks
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And here's another film which sat in my queue forever - and, for that matter, I think actually, back in the day, arrived as a Netflix DVD before being returned unwatched: Lena Dunham's 2010 film Tiny Furniture. It stars Lena Dunham his mother Laurie Simmons, and her sister Grace Dunham (with the latter two playing, appropriately enough, her mother and sister). It's often compared to an early Woody Allen movie, with the appropriate wink at the audience when one of the characters, Jed (Alex Karpovsky), is continually reading Without Feathers. I liked it a lot, although I wonder if the explosion of praise might have been a bit overdone, and partially related to her writing and directing it at the precocious age of twenty-four. Still, I shouldn't downplay it simply because she never topped it later.
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The other night we finally watched a film that had sat in my Criterion Channel queue for way to long: Variety Lights. It's a 1951 move that was co-directed by Federico Fellini and Alberto Lattuada. I think it first entered the queue because I was in a Fallini mood, but then we finally watched it when we made the Alberto Lattuada connection. We had just watched Lattuada's Mafioso, which has become a cabin favorite. Variety Lights is the first film where Fellini received directorial credit, so there must have been a solid relationship between him and Lattuada, who was already a well-known filmmaker. It feels very much like a Fellini film, with that related joy and sadness that somehow always work out so beautifully together in his work. Plus, it co-stars Giulietta Masina (his wife), who also later starred in La Strada and Nights of Cabiria. Definitely recommended.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
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My computer is, as is its wont, deciding to be weird and inefficient, which is keeping me from downloading/uploading pictures this morning. I guess this is what happens when you turn your laptop off and on to give it a break, and in the process it forgets how to do anything. All of this is by way of saying that I won't be able to post any movie posters (maybe I'll sort it out and come back and amend these posts). I will sometimes show clips from Benjamin Christensen's 1922 Swedish film Haxen, and I did so the other day in my COR 303 class. Not surprisingly, this led to me watching the entire film yet again, and thus it has made its way onto the blog. Haxen, which means "Witch," is one part documentary and one part horror film, and it adds up to a very rich cinematic experience. It's also amazing how clean the print is, both the one which seems to live eternally at the Criterion Channel and the one you can find on YouTube. Recommended.
Monday, March 9, 2026
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After Bleeder and Re-Wind maybe it made sense that I needed a Harold Lloyd recalibration, although I had already been working through a series of his films on the Criterion Channel already. Last night I watched Lloyd's classic Safety Last!, which also starred Mildred Davis (as The Girl), Bill Strother (as The Pal, Limpy Bill), and Noah Young (as The Law). Mildred Davis often co-starred with Lloyd, and eventually the two of them married. Safety Last! features some classic Harold Lloyd bits, including that classic scene of him hanging from a clock that is the natural result of any image search. Recommended.
July CFL Excellence
The second CFL Trip of Excellence is becoming a reality. My cousin Nick and I are meeting in Hamilton in June for a Tiger-Cats game (he's already reserved the rooms, and now we're just waiting for the single game tickets to go on sale for I purchase a couple of nice seats on the 55 yard line). This will be followed up by the long-discussed Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Saskatchewan Roughriders doubleheader in July. The plane tickets have been purchased - flying into Winnipeg and flying out of Regina (in between we're renting a car for the long drive in between) - and the rooms have been reserved. Again, we're just waiting for the individual game tickets to go on sale. Kevin and I will be attending both games, and Cyndi is joining us for the first part of the trip. In doing so, CB will join the inner circle of true CFL fans who have attended games with me at more than one CFL stadium (joining Kevin, Andy, and Sandy). After that trip, the only outlier in my quest to have visited every CFL stadium will be Victoria and to a BC Lions home game. I guess that will have to wait until the summer of 2027 when/if I'm back for a visit.
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As part of the same VHS Forever collection featured on the Criterion Channel this month I also watched Hisayasu Sato's 1998 film Re-Wind. Over the years I've heard of Sato films, but I never got around to watching one. OK, now I have, so I guess I don't have to watch another one. He's one of those guerilla film makers that I'm glad, on one level, who exist and are out pushing the boundaries of cinema and not making films for the Marvel Universe or the Hallmark Channel. At the same time, an hour of watching Re-Wind's sex and violence left me bored and disinterested. As I was watching it, I kept thinking that the emotionally stunted Lenny from Bleeder would have loved this movie.






