Archive for January, 2006
January 5, 2006 at 11:08 pm · Filed under Movies
2005 wasn’t a fantastic year for movies (although I haven’t seen a lot of the late heavyweights yet), but this is a gem. Danny Trainspotting Boyle has made his sweetest film, about a Northern English kid who find a bag full of money from a train heist, and who speaks regularly with saints — Clare and Francis of Assisi, for two. There’s a nice homage to Shallow Grave (lots of hiding in attics with a whole bunch o’ money), but the scary factor is amped way down. I’m putting this at the top of the family-friendly best of 2005.
Oh dear, I’ve just checked in with the ol’ IMDb, and this is technically a 2004 release, since they showed it at the Toronto Film Festival in a particular even-numbered year.
January 5, 2006 at 10:46 pm · Filed under Fun
Make this guy say such things. Lots of possibilities here.
January 5, 2006 at 12:11 am · Filed under Asides, Teevee
“Why not?” asks the indignant Jessica. “I’m not indignant!” she declares, indignantly.
January 2, 2006 at 8:26 pm · Filed under Movies
A cute little short on the TCM. A newspaper editor decides “Frost Warning!” is a more important headline for his readership than the gangster that was gunned down in front of him. His assistant: a geeky 28-year-old named Jimmy Stewart, in one of his first roles.
Anyway, it’s great to have priorities.
January 2, 2006 at 4:38 am · Filed under Movies

This is an important talkie, I think. Edward G. Robinson (was there another Edward Robinson that made G. become the Daniel J. Travanti of his day?) rises from Rico the street hood to the top of the crime food chain, and then back down he goes. It anticipates by a few years Paul Muni’s Scarface and all those Cagney movies like The Public Enemy and White Heat. I couldn’t really get into it, however. I did notice some pre-Hays Code insinuations about Rico’s non-hetero leanings, but other than that I feel like I’ve seen this movie a few times in a few better ways, even if this one came first.
Jessica noticed that what appeared to be ceilings in low-angled shots were actually just extensions of the backdrop painted trompe l’oeil. It was an interesting effect, apparently abandoned soon after this film, because you don’t see much in the way of movie set ceilings again, or even low-angle shots (due to the pesky intrusion of overhead lights and booms and the like), until Citizen Kane ten years later.
It’s a short movie at 80 minutes. There was barely time for any “pizza pizza” jokes from the peanut gallery.
January 2, 2006 at 2:27 am · Filed under Blogstuff
Time to resolve stuff, like more frequent blogging. My family’s got a blog that’s probably not too interesting for non-family members, but it’s doing pretty well. And now it seems that pretty much everybody I know is doing this sort of thing. I’m rejoining the century!
« Previous entries