Tag Archives: Recommendations

What to Watch Tonight

I have about half of a thoughtful meta entry written, but it just didn’t happen. New review this Thursday though – I can promise that.  In the meanwhile, three more recommendations! All available to stream on Netflix, but worth hunting down for those of you without.

Yes, I know I just did one of these.

The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) –
The original, and still one of the best science fiction films ever made. Its plot is simple, almost fable-like, but like a lot of good alien stories, allows us the illusion of looking at humanity from the outside. The effects hold up decently well, considering the production year, and you get all kinds of nerd cred once you know what “Klaatu barada nikto” means.

The real interest, though in The Day the Earth Stood Still, is the way in which it takes all sorts of tropes and devices that fill the crappy, MST3K-fodder films of the period, and weaves them into a solid, thoughtful story. The moralizing may seem a bit heavy-handed to a modern viewer, but it serves as a nice bookend to 1956’s Invasion of the Body Snatchers as a Cold War-era cautionary tale.

Blazing Saddles (1974) –
With True Grit poised to nab several Oscar nominations, following the success of a variety of Westerns and neo-Westerns in the past few years, it’s safe to say there’s a renewed interest in the genre. Which is great, as it means more people can appreciate the brilliance that is Blazing Saddles. For my money, it’s one of the funniest movies ever, with the bonus of actually functioning (for 2/3 of the movie, at least) as an example of the genre. (Good parody is funny because it’s true.)

Gene Wilder is brilliant as ever, and Cleavon Little is amazing in the starring role. Madeline Kahn is always worth watching, and the writing is some of Mel Brooks’ very best. If you haven’t seen it, treat yourself, and if you have… treat yourself again. It’s the rare comedy that rewards close re-viewings, but this is one of them.

Star Trek (2009) –
The most recent installment in the Star Trek franchise shows what a good reboot can do. You do enough homage to the original to keep most of your existing fanbase, but you make the huge mythology re-accessable to newbies who might be scared off normally. J.J. Abrams crafts a beautiful popcorn movie, gleefully using and reusing the conventions of space opera while at the same time keeping the film grounded in its franchise.

All the casting is very good – Zachary Quinto is a standout as Spock, but I love Karl Urban’s McCoy. The cinematography gets a little lens-flare happy, as you might have heard, but also isn’t afraid to show off its big-budget effects in ways that actually move the plot forward. Michael Giacchino’s score is also a thing of beauty. Much fun.

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What To Watch Tonight

Brief ones tonight, but no less recommended than usual. All available to stream.

The 39 Steps (1935) –
Early Hitchcock is still awesome Hitchcock. Reminiscent of North By Northwest (among others) in the way a normal man is drawn into a situation that’s anything but. The atmosphere is creepy, the mystery is intriguing, and the cast (none of whom you’re likely to recognize) do an excellent job. (Even if all I can think of is the Sesame Street sketch.) It’s also only 86 minutes, for those looking for something a bit on the shorter side.

Enemy Mine (1985) –
This is one of my very favorite sci fi movies; it deserves much more attention than it gets. Dennis Quaid and Louis Gosset Jr. are spot on as stranded soldiers from opposing sides forced to survive together. Sure, it’s filed with tropes, but it does them thoughtfully and to good effect. The effects are a little dated, but it’s a movie that isn’t about effects so much as concepts. The differences in Draconian and human cultures (and biologies), while glossed, are still intriguingly handled, and even where the movie doesn’t succeed, it tries in interesting ways.

The Fall (2006) –
Please, please watch The Fall. Every rewatch has been incredibly rewarding, but even the first one was enjoyable. The Fall tells the story of an injured stuntman (Lee Pace) and his relationship with a little girl (the astoundingly good Catinca Untaru) as they both heal in a California hospital in the 1920s. The visuals are unbelievably lush, the storytelling (both meta and not) is engrossing, and it marries a sense of fable to a very grounded emotional core. Also, effective use of Beethoven. Gorgeous.

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Watching Christmas Movies

Christmas movies, like Christmas music, need reviewing in a slightly different vein than other forms of entertainment.  I’m no believer in cutting holiday movies slack because they’re holiday movies; there are certainly enough good ones that there’s no excuse for watching drivel just because it happens to involve jingle bells.

That said, however, each new holiday movie is seen with a critical eye. Will this movie become a staple of the yearly celebration? Will it stand up to yearly re-watchings, or is it the sort of thing you put on in the background of a holiday party, knowing no one will really be watching it?

The first thing to consider is A Christmas Carol. Dickens’ novella, in many ways, defined the secular Christmas we know and love today, and few would make a list of favorite Christmas films that didn’t include at least one feature-length version.  There are animated versions, old versions, new versions. It’s a story that will hold up under countless retellings, and choosing the best becomes, ultimately, a matter of taste. I am quite fond of the musical Albert Finney version, called Scrooge (incredibly cheesy in places, but fun):

Not to be confused with the also-delightful Bill Murray Scrooged. But, and without a wink, my actual favorite has to be The Muppet Christmas Carol. It’s more than a decade old, but wears well all the same. The jokes still work, it’s kid friendly without being condescending, and the scary parts are legitimately creepy. Michael Caine is pitch perfect, not redeeming Scrooge too soon, and preserving Scrooge’s wonderful sense of humor.

Scrooge hates caroling bunnies.

With A Christmas Carol, you’re telling a story everyone knows; it’s the film equivalent of The Nutcracker. (I’ve seen a couple movie adaptations, but I’d give them all a skip and see the ballet live if you can.)  Some Christmas movies, while not adapted over and over, have achieved this same mythical status. It’s A Wonderful Life, thanks to syndicated television, certainly makes the grade, and White Christmas does too. (I watch Holiday Inn, mainly because I love Fred Astaire, but its cringe-inducing blackface number means it’s never going to be a mainstream choice again.)  The original Miracle on 34th Street, for me, is another that the season doesn’t feel complete without. Though I’ve seen one of the several remakes, I was unimpressed; original, non-colorized all the way.

 

Yes, please.

These are films that, through annual re-watching, you know by heart, almost shot for shot. It’s hard to keep a critical distance through the combination of familiarity and nostalgia, though when you do, it can yield some interesting results. (I’ve been much more interested in It’s A Wonderful Life once I realized what a dark, unsettling movie it really is.) Repetition can eventually open new aspects of a movie that you weren’t looking for.

Then there are films you know aren’t objectively good, but that you’re so used to watching, you keep watching anyway.  My family watched March of the Wooden Soldiers every year, and while Laurel and Hardy are a delight, the rest of the story is pretty feeble. (“Nevermind, Bo Peep” will be stuck in your head forever, though, once it lodges there.)

I’m also fond of the first installment of Tim Allen’s Santa Clause franchise, though neither of the sequels; partly, this is because I loved it as a kid, and was also a big fan of Home Improvement at the time it came out. I know many people who love National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, though I’m a little meh on it; I have nostalgic affection for Home Alone, but no drive to rewatch it.  My parents love A Christmas Story, which bored me as a child, but I’ve grown into as an adult.

There are movies that aren’t technically Christmas movies, but have a Christmas element to them. Little Women (1994) definitely fits this bill, as does Edward Scissorhands (but if you’re in the mood for Tim Burton, I’d just go with the stellar The Nightmare Before Christmas instead). Though I think it works better on stage, The Man Who Came to Dinner is certainly considered a classic. And while The Apartment is one of my favorite movies, it doesn’t feel very Christmas-y, despite the centrality of the holidays to the plot.

At the risk of just turning this into a laundry list of holiday films, I will summarize by saying that the holidays are a time to celebrate traditions. For some families, these traditions are musical, or culinary. They might include visits to particular places, or reading particular books.  In my family, Christmas always included Christmas films, some the same, some new.  (I had never seen Love Actually before this year. I know, horrifying. Bill Nighy, I love you.)

But it’s nice to use my critic powers only for good, and to revisit these annual films like the old friends they are.

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