Archive for Deborah Lipp

Monday Movie Review: Blue Velvet

Blue Velvet (1986) 8/10
When Jeffrey (Kyle MacLachlan) finds a severed human ear in a field, he discovers a world of corruption hiding just past the edges of his peaceful community. Written and directed by David Lynch.

I saw this movie a couple of months ago, and haven’t known what to make of it. Its reputation is so big it almost drowns out the experience of seeing it.

There are ways in which it’s all too heavy-handed. OMGZ! Look! There’s filth underneath the pretty suburb! Laura Dern as Jeffrey’s innocent neighbor is a bit too innocent and too baby doll, Isabella Rossellini is too histrionic, throwing herself to the floor, throwing herself, in fact, pretty much to the exclusion of normal movement. And Dennis Hopper is too Dennis Hopper. It’s a garish movie painted in garish colors; very much a painting, something extreme and splashy and full of symbols for art students to discuss.

And yet the images are striking and remarkable. It’s David Lynch, after all, the master of the strange image, and I’m a believer in movies as a medium of images. I loved Mulholland Dr. and didn’t understand it; I kind of feel like understanding the narrative isn’t always necessary. Maybe it’s usually necessary, but the David Lynches of the world are there to be an exception.

The world that Jeffrey spies on through Dorothy (Rossellini) is so dark as to be incomprehensible. It is perverse, violent, and anarchic. It was really hard for me to follow what was going on with the crime plot, even though some of it was pretty simple in retrospect, but it is seen through the eyes of Jeffrey, to whom it is all foreign. The darkness of it is repulsive, and I am left, as I often am, wondering if I’m the only one actually repulsed by repulsiveness. It seems like Frank Booth (Hopper) is a character everyone loves to quote, as if kidnapping, rape, and murder bring the funny. My take on Booth is he is a nightmare, a “monster from the id,” and not at all funny.

Roger Ebert somewhat famously wrote a one-star review of this film. Although I disagree, I see his point; it’s not complicated to see Blue Velvet as hateful. At some level, though, I think he fundamentally misunderstands.

Isabella Rossellini’s husband and son have been kidnapped by Dennis Hopper, who makes her his sexual slave. The twist is that the kidnapping taps into the woman’s deepest feelings: She finds that she is a masochist who responds with great sexual passion to this situation.

I doubt it. Ebert is saying that first Hopper kidnapped Rossellini’s family, using their captivity to get her to bed, and she ultimately became aroused, despite hating him and hating her arousal. No way.

More likely, Rossellini discovered her S&M desires in a consensual relationship with Booth, perhaps seeking him out because of those desires, and then, when she wanted out, he kidnapped her family in order to keep her enslaved. Like Jeffery, Dorothy wanted to toy with the edge of the dark unknown, but she fell in. She’s Dorothy, stuck in Oz, needing a Wizard to free her.

Ebert hates, and is uncomfortable with, the constant contrasts in this film between “nice” and “perverse,” as embodied by the two women; “nice” Sandy (Laura Dern) and “perverse” Dorothy. He sees the nice as snide and satiric, and the perverse as a straight story (ha! see what I did there?). But carrying around a gas canister to suck on while raping a woman and calling yourself Baby at the top of your lungs is really not normal, and is no less exaggerated than the nicey-nice scenes. Both sides are equally broad, and in a way, equally disturbing. The nice is bad because it isn’t real, the dark because it’s bad, and hyper-real. Our hero, Jeffrey, walks between the two worlds, spying on each, before finally making a choice.

Supporting Actor Trivia all solved

Tricky this week.

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Fun with language and animals

Two things I heard at Mom’s:

“My monkey is stuck.”

“If you want to turn the fan off, pull the fish.”

Tuesday Trivia: Supporting Actors

I think we’ve done this before. I’m skipping the first four credited actors (at least, and the rest aren’t necessarily consecutive). Guess the movie (preferably without peeking at IMDb) based on the supporting cast.

1. Robert Loggia, Vivica Fox, Harvey Fierstein
Solved by Christina.

2. Christopher Walken, Bronson Pinchot, James Gandolfini
Solved by Ben.

3. Jane Alexander, Robert Walden, Stephen Collins
Solved by Melville.

4. Jean Dixon, Pat Flaherty, Robert Light
Hint: Eugene Pallette, Alan Mowbray, Mischa Auer
Solved by Melville.

5. Alison Lohman, Loudon Wainwright III, Marion Cotillard
Solved by Christina.

6. Bob Hoskins, Jim Broadbent, Sheila Reid
Solved by Tom Hilton.

7. Akim Tamiroff, Dennis Weaver, Joanna Moore
Solved by Tom Hilton.

Monday Movie Review: Ponyo

Ponyo (2008) 9/10
Ponyo is a magical fish who escapes her wizard father. Sosuke is a five year old boy who finds her and loves her unconditionally. Because of his love, Ponyo turns herself into a little girl, but the magic she unleashes to do so has cataclysmic results. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki.

This is sort of Little Mermaid without the sexism and campy villain. It is the youngest Miyazaki movie I’ve seen, in the sense that it really is for little kids, and one of the most Japanese (compared to, say, Howl’s Moving Castle, which is based on a Welsh story).

There is so much to love about Ponyo. It is one of the most joyful movies I’ve ever seen. A long, almost wordless sequence of Ponyo, in girl form, chasing Sosuke & his mother in a car by running across the back of a giant fish, is exquisite. I mean, happiness isn’t as easy to depict as you’d imagine. She’s happy, she’s full of life, and no words are needed. Later, she runs around a house, exactly as a five year old girl would, so joyful you want to applaud.

Then there is a rich realism. Like I said, Ponyo runs like a girl. Both kids act exactly like kids; not gussied up and fictionalized. On a couple of occasions, Ponyo falls asleep with exactly the entertaining loss of consciousness every parent has seen. Even better, Sosuke’s mother, Lisa, is a wonderfully true character. She gets angry at her husband and pops a beer, then lays on the floor, tipsy and fuming. She’s accepting, she’s playful, she’s disorganized, she’s just…human. Not “Mom” or “Cartoon Mom,” but human. I loved her.

Ponyo is the oldest of a large school of fish, the children of a wizard and magical mother we know little about until later in the film. She has enormous power but is just a little tot, so her father keeps her confined to prevent trouble. Naturally, she hates her confinement and “swims away.” So far, we’re in cliché land. I see a female protagonist being raised by a father, naturally I assume it’s the classic Motherless Girl syndrome. In fact, Ponyo does have a mother, and it’s a delight when we meet her. Since that information is held back in the film, I won’t give it away, but her motherlessness serves as a perfect parallel to Sosuke’s fatherlessness.

There’s also a lot of juxtaposition of youth and age. Lisa works in a Senior Center that is next door to Sosuke’s daycare. A five year-old boy drives the action, largely supported by a group of old ladies.

Needless to say, the film is exquisitely beautiful. Because I like to allow my eyes to focus on the imagery, I prefer dubbing to subtitles, but I know I’m a minority among film buffs. For that reason, I haven’t dwelled on the Western voice actors in the dubbed version, but they do a great job, and they’re quite a pedigreed bunch: Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Matt Damon, Cate Blanchett, Lily Tomlin, Betty White, Cloris Leachman, and more.

Please politicize my death

I can’t say it any better than Amanda Marcotte.

Rest in Peace, Senator Kennedy

Liberals and progressives have lost a true champion. Kennedy was a committed and vigorous defender of just about everything I value; of protection to the unprotected, of true liberty, of the rights and dignity of all people. He was an orator and a pitbull. He was never weak, never centrist, never known for compromise, yet got things done. The world is a poorer place today for his absence.

Character Math Solutions

All solved!

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Tuesday Trivia: Character Math

Thanks so much to arghous for his unusual guest trivia while I was gallivanting in Hollywood. Here’s some character math. The equation should equal a movie.

1. Alfie + de Wynter = Kipling?
Solved by Tom Hilton.

2. Alfie + Hamlet = science fiction?
Solved by Tom Hilton.

3. Godfather plus Janet’s ex = The Bank Job?
Solved by Evn.

4. Ripley + Judge Turpin = Trekkers?
Solved by Melville.

5. Trewlaney + the Prime Minister = Becoming Jane?
Solved by Christina.

6. Wednesday + a Friend = opposition?
Solved by Tom Hilton.

7. Maria + Crockett = hunt?
Solved by Daven, George, & Hogan.

Monday Movie Review: Julie & Julia

Julie & Julia (2009) 8/10
“Based on 2 true stories:” Julia Child (Meryl Streep) and her husband Paul (Stanley Tucci) move to Paris, and Julia struggles to find something that interests her to occupy her time, finally enrolling in the Cordon Bleu; Julie Powell (Amy Adams) writes a blog chronicling her process of working her way through Child’s cookbook over the course of a year. Written & directed by Nora Ephron.

Every single reviewer who has written about this film has remarked that Julia is more interesting than Julie, and that’s true. The Julia sequences have two of the great watchable actors, Streep is astonishing, Tucci is astonishing, it’s like a houseful of astonishing. The Julie sequences have Amy Adams, who is lovely and very good, and Chris Messina who is also good, but come on! The Julia scenes also have world travel, period clothing and settings, and snooty Parisians, so who could compete with that?

But the movie brings something more to the table than simply dividing it into two and comparing sides. It is full of warmth; indeed, it is full of love. Here is a story in which both female leads are married to good, loving men and have okay lives. They’re trying to find themselves and they do so through cooking, but they are not tragic, desperate, ridiculous, or slapstick.

Early on, I was surprised to discover that Julie Powell is a really good cook. This project was not disproportionate to her skill, despite her insecurity. I had expected something more laughable. More of a movie, I guess, and less of a life. I realize that much of Julie’s life is fictionalized, but it feels grounded.

What struck me as I left the theater was that there were no weirdly awkward scenes, no twists, no complicated rom-com goofy switcharoos, no nothing except joy and discovery and hard work and a sense of both its frustrations and rewards. It’s a movie that is not at all dull, and yet not dependent on cinematic situations to keep it interesting. It has good friendships, good conversations, wit, sex, and lots and lots of wonderful food.

I think you should see it.