Saturday, June 02, 2007

Summer Movies and Books

I'm kind of in between semesters except for a few hrs in the writing center and a number of projects I should finish before summer semester in a week and half. Having this extra time I've endulged in several movies and finally gotten around to a few of the books stacked on my desk and end table.

Wife and I watched Shut up and sing about the Dixie Chicks (well really the lead singer, Natalie Maines) "controversial" statements about being embarrassed that Bush was also from Texas. Wife and I really enjoyed the film and our respect for the Chicks grew--only slight disagreement was when I said, in earshot of a kid or two, in defense of Natalie's use of the F-word: "I think she is quite sexy when she uses the F-word." By which, I quickly added, I mean every time she used it in the film she was highlighting her tenacity in fighting against Bush, the war, and the shalacking they were taking by country music fans and radio stations. I think women can be sexy when they are tough--that was my point. Next time I might wait till said children are in bed to offer such profound insights into the F-word.

I just finished The Good Shepherd and I'm going to go out on a limb, even though I don't have a carefully crafted argument to support my claim: TGS should have gotten several nominations, one for best actor, Matt Damon, and one for best picture/director (it only got best art F.... direction! I thought it was genius but it seems understated, low key, subtle movies/
performances often get overlooked unless they are of the Merchant-Ivory variety. The film continues to float around in my head, especially Damon's character which was skillfully portrayed with nuance and reservation.

Oldest son and I finally watched Independence Day (certainly a fun popcorn movie as one review put it) and Pan's Labrynth (after hearing about it during the Oscars). Pan's was a wonderful, deliciously dark fantasy mixed with realism. A few gratuitous violent scenes which we fast-forwarded but the rest was spot on. I really appreciated how the film works both as a "real" (like this happened) fantasy/fairy tale and as a realistic psychological display of a child's struggle to deal with a the wicked (and very evil) step-father.

I'm reading both The Spiral Staircase: My Climb out of darkness by Karen Armstrong and The God Delusion by the infamous Richard Dawkins. I'm not as far in the Dawkin's book as it doesn't have an engaging narrative like Armstrong's story of her recovery from seven years in a convent, but still the parallels are stricking. Armstrong, renowned religious scholar, retells her painful journey back to "regular" life, working through anxiety attacks, dangerous amnesiac episodes, and a bout with anorexia. Not only does she fail as a nun, she then fails her Oxford dissertation, thought a very controversial failure, after years of work. Somehow, as I kind of know how things will turn out, she makes it through all this to become a self-sponsored scholar, writing definitive works on all of the major relgions. Amazingly, on some level (not as "believer"), she works through the hate and dismissal of religion and turns it into her career. I can't wait to see how exactly she does this and compare it side by side with Dawkin's absolute refusal to see religion as anything but deception.

10 comments:

Dr. Write said...

Thanks for the review. I think TGS is in our cue. And I was just talking about "Shut Up and Sing" last night with a friend. I can't wait to see it. I have to say I was lukewarm about TDC before the comment, and I bought their new CD just to support them. But I do love it and can't wait to see the documentary.

Counterintuitive said...

You were lukewarm about "Earl has to die!"? I quite liked them even before all this and now I like them even more.

Lisa B. said...

I love the Chicks. Their songs get me. I wanted to see TGS and somehow missed it. (Loved that FBI one with Chris Cooper and that Ryan Phillipe guy--) Thanks for the reviews of the books. You'll have to tell me whether they're worth reading, in the end, when you're done.

middlebrow said...

Go Dawkins! The Armstrong book also sounds interesting and I look forward to seeing the Good Shepard. The Dixie Chicks I can take or leave, but I do admire them for their stand against Bushie.

shane said...

You've sold me. The Good Shepard is on my netflix list now. I saw the Dixie Chick movie, too. Love those gals. And I know exactly what you mean about sexy "tough" women.

Anonymous said...

My thing with the Dixie Chicks is that they are musicians, and I could give a shit what they think of the government or politics in general. They are free to bash anybody they like, however, I prefer they do it here and not in front of a crowd of Londoners. To do so overseas seems cowardly to me.

It's not exactly genius PR to be a mainstream country group (whose primary fan base are flag-waving "patriotic" rednecks) and then bash the US overseas.

As far as TGS goes, Darci and I were kind of bored by it. It seemed like a good story, but it was took too long to get there. Matt Damon was really good, though. Right now, we are on a Netflix-fueled 24 binge, so it'll be awhile before we see any more movies.

Counterintuitive said...

Exactly right Rod--it wasn't great PR which to me is quite honorable.

My sense is that the statement itself was not planned but rather sprung out of the anti-war milieu of Europe. Making the statement is not really what impresses me but rather how they dealt with the criticism. As documented in the film there were several opportunities to back down (and Natalie was pressured to do just this by the other chicks and her manager early on). Natalie didn't and eventually the band chanelled their anger and frustration into an album which reached beyond their country base. I respect this move; it took courage and it represents to me what more of us could have done. Maybe if more people had the outcome in Iraq would have been different. Either way it was the right thing to do.

I've done some 24 binges myself--very addictive.

lis said...

I was thinking about reading the Spiral Staircase after reading about it something else (a food magazine?--anyway something I was reading on the way home from Moab yesterday). Let me know if it's good.

I finally saw, btw, Spirited Away, which I loved beyond words. You've used it in Ch Lit right? I'm thinking about doing the same next year.

Clint Gardner said...

The God Delusion is a hoot.

HH said...

Wow! We have a few readings in common. Thanks for the viewing recommendations.

I enjoyed "shut up and sing" as well. I thought that natalie maines was pretty "hot" too. IT was nice to see that she didn't "backdown." And, that she was not "ready to make nice." I love the album.

Angie and I are out for the Summer. Your dad wired our new Hot Tub. What a good man! He did a great job (nothing new there I know).

I look forward to your comments on Dawkins. Yes, I am prolly too big a fan, but.. well... you know.. my obsession runs a bit too deep in that area.

Best,

HH