Thursday, April 30, 2026

Movies in 2026 134

 

Michael Clayton (Tony Gilroy, 2007)

Somehow I had never managed to watch Michael Clayton until last night, although folks I know, and whose film opinion I respect, think a lot of it. I liked it a lot, and thought it was, by far, George Clooney's best performance. I've always like Clooney, partially because we're about the same age and from the same area and, obviously, the same leading man good looks (grin), and partially because of his politics, but sometimes he slides by on good looks and charm (although, truthfully, I think that's more a comment on the failure of the director than the actor). However, he's great in Michael Clayton. I was surprised that Tony Gilroy has not done more meaningful work. His career mainly seems to be related to the Bourne franchise and Star Wars related TV material, which seems like a waste of a lot of talent.

Movies in 2026 133

 

Ball of Fire (Howard Hawks, 1941)

Yesterday I watched a film that I hadn't seen in years, Howard Hawks's Ball of Fire. It starred Barbara Stanwyck and Gary Cooper - and was directed by Howard Hawks - all at the height of their careers. It's a good as I remembered. A couple things jumped to mind as I watched it. First off, TV's The Big Bang Theory is such an incredible ripoff of Ball of Fire. The film was actually remade, again directed, oddly, by Howard Hawks in 1948 as A Song is Born, starring Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo. However, at least people who saw A Song is Born in 1948 understood that it was a remark. Somehow I doubt that anyone who watches The Big Bang Theory understands that it's essentially either an homage or a ripoff of a classic Hollywood film. To be fair, I've only seen snippets of The Big Bang Theory at the gym, where it seems to be playing twenty-four hours a day - maybe it I watched it I'd be a fan. Secondly, the supporting cast of Ball of Fire is chockfull of future stars and famous character actors: Dana Andrews (later in Laura, The Best Years of Our Lives, etc.), Elisha Cook, Jr. (The Big Sleep, Shane, House on Haunted Hill, etc.), Henry Travers (It's a Wonderful Life, Mrs. Miniver, The Bells of St Mary's, etc.), Oscar Homolka (I Remember Mama, The Seven Year Itch, etc.), S.Z. Sakall (Casablanca, Christmas in Connecticut, etc.), Tully Marshall (The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Oliver Twist, etc.), Leonid Kinskey (Casablanca, The Man with the Golden Arm, etc.), Richard Haydn (And Then There Were None, Alice in Wonderland, etc.), and Aubrey Mather (Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Suspicion, Jane Eyre, etc.). This would be THE MOVIE for a film version of Immaculate Grid.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Movies in 2026 132

 

King Kong (Merian C. Cooper, 1933)

I cannot remember the last time I saw the original King Kong, which takes us all the way back to Merian C. Cooper's 1933 classic. It's part of that Criterion Channel collection which is paying homage to the first Criterion Collection films with commentary for which they've lost permission (to sell DVD copies, although they can still occasionally stream them on the Channel). Considering the state of America in 1933, in the depth of a Great Depression caused by unregulated corporate greed, it's not surprising that audiences loved seeing King Kong smash the shit out of New York. As I was watching I kept thinking about the final line: "It was beauty that killed the beast." A much truer line would have been, "It was capitalism than killed the beast." I also found myself wondering why Fay Wray is not universally recognized as the first Scream Queen.

A CFL Life

 You know that you live a very rich and fun - or unimaginably silly - life when it's still April and you open your Ticketmaster app and you already have tickets for Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Winnipeg Blue Bombers, and Saskatchewan Roughriders games. Come on, that's some serious CFL love.

Thanks for coming to my TedTalk.

Movies in 2026 131

 

Nightfall (Jacques Tourneur, 1956)

Last night we delved back into the Criterion Channel's Jacques Tourneur film noir collection (it's a small collection, although Out of the Past is waiting) to watch his 1956 movie Nightfall. It's certainly not as good as Out of the Past (but what film noir is?), but a hell of a lot better than Berlin Express. It had some nice moments, and also some borderline ridiculous moments, so I wouldn't run out to watch it if I were you, but there are worse uses of your time. Mainly, it was interesting for the related rabbit hole exploration it inspired: 1) I didn't know that its star, Aldo Ray, is the father of Eric Da Re, who played Leo Johnson on Twin Peaks, 2) it was one of Anne Bancroft's first movies, 3) Janet didn't make the connection between Brian Keith and the old TV show Family Affair, although when I reminded her she did automatically remember Buffy and Jody, and 4) I remembered that James Gregory (what a great voice) was a character actor who was in a ton of films, but I forgot that he played Deputy Inspector Franklin Luger on Barney Miller for years. It also had one of the great completely over the top movie posters of all time (see above).

Vermont Public Philosophy Week 2026

 It's funny how an event that I initially was tricked/dragooned/misdirected into participating in - the Vermont Public Philosophy Week - has become an annual tradition that I really look forward to. Last Saturday I gave a talk on "'Your Hatred Is Evidence of Our Power': What Thucydides Tells Us About the Decline of America" at the Adamant Community Club. It was a success, although I never admit to much of anything being a success. Still, if you can draw a crowd of ten people to a location hidden down on a dirt road on a beautiful spring day then I guess it's a success. Plus, everyone stayed past the allotted time to continue asking questions and making comments. However, how can you screw up a talk based on Thucydides during these turbulent times in America? All the credit really goes to Tyler Doggett, a philosophy professor from UVM who organizes all of it. It's such a great idea: getting the community together to discuss ideas.

It was an enthusiastic crowd, including one hardy soul who drove in all the way from Burlington for the talk (reminding me of the three people who came in from BTV last year to hear my talk on Pessoa).

The talk combined Thucydides's accounts of the Funeral Oration of Pericles and the Melian Dialogue, viewed through the lens of America today and the great lie of American Exceptionalism. It was a lot of fun to give, and it inspired a lot of good questions.


Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Movies in 2026 130

 

Princess Iron Fan (Wan Guchan & Wan Wailing, 1941)

This is the go-to film that I always show for the Final In-Class Analysis in my Journey to the West class. It's an entertaining film, based on a classic adventure from Journey to the West, and a perfect fit for what I'm trying to accomplish with the final. Princess Iron Fan is the first animated feature in Chinese history, and is also clearly intended to serve as a propaganda film (and it works very well as such). It's easy to find on YouTube, and you should definitely check it out.