Thursday, November 22, 2018

My Movie Reviews For 2018

Fall Movie Round-Up


Movie theaters are about to get flooded with a ton of movies this week since Thanksgiving is upon us and movie studios want to keep us entertained while we laze about in our stuffing and turkey comas.  Then about two weeks later, the rest of the prestige pictures and holiday blockbusters roll out.  Before that deluge occurs, I thought I would do a round-up of the big movies that came out the last few weeks in case there was something you were curious about. 
First off, everyone seems either to love “A Star Is Born”, based on its’ big box office revenues, or has expressed a really strong interest in seeing it.  I was hesitant about it at first since it is a drama, a third remake of the original movie, and features a first time director and first time lead actress.  Then again, I’m actually the target audience for the movie.  No, I’m not a millennial (I wish!) but I haven’t actually seen any of the other versions of the movie so it will supposedly be fresh and new to me.  I know the general plot line though, from having seen the trailer and from reading the Mad Magazine parody of the 1976 version with Barbara Streisand and Kris Kristofferson.  Also I’m in the target audience because I’m curious to see how Lady Gaga does in the movie since I’ve followed her musical career and, like everyone who saw the trailer, I want to see the scene where she just starts wailing out a song by going from a vocal standstill to full bellow! 

I was pleasantly surprised by the movie.  There was nothing in the plot that surprised me but there were a lot of small pleasures along the way that kept me engaged and enjoying myself.  Lady Gaga did a great job as Ally, not just with the vocal performances but with the acting as well.  The small gripes I had about her character – how she acted once she became famous and how it was contrary to the personality she established earlier in the movie - were more the fault of the script than her acting.  She sang great although I wasn’t in love with the songs she was working with- I much preferred director/lead actor Bradley Cooper’s songs.  Speaking of Cooper, he does a marvelous job in his directorial debut especially considering that he had a significant acting role in the movie as Jack, the male lead.  His visual technique, his scene-framing choices, and his editing decisions were all spot on.  I’m fully expecting Academy Award nominations for him in both capacities.  I also enjoyed Andrew Dice Clay in a small role as Ally’s father, the look at the music industry, Sam Elliott as Jack’s long suffering brother, and the live crowds in some of the performance scenes.  One crowd scene was even an indirect homage to Kris Kristofferson’s role in the 1976 film, since Kristofferson let Cooper have 15 minutes of stage time during one of his concerts in order to film a song scene with a live audience.  So overall, I enjoyed the movie and would recommend it to anyone who thinks they might want to see it.
A couple movies I saw fall into the ‘If you think you want to see it, you will like it.’  Free Solo is about a rock climber who attempts to free-climb the El Capitan mountain in Yosemite National Park.  Free solo refers to a type of rock climbing where the climber climbs by himself without using any pitons, ropes, or fail-safe protection.  Basically, it means there is a guy in a t-shirt and climbing shoes and around his waist is a bag of chalk powder that he uses to keep his hands dry as he navigates the cracks and small handholds of the rock surface to climb a mountain.  Sounds crazy, right?  On top of that, El Capitan is supposed to be one of the tougher mountains to climb even with fixed ropes and companions because of how sheer and smooth it is.  Doesn’t that sound like a fun way to spend some time outdoors?  

Oh, I didn’t yet mention that this is a documentary so that means this dude Alex actually tried this climb.  His new girlfriend is a little worried about him and why he feels the need to do this.  The documentary follows the couple around and shows how they each go about preparing themselves for the attempted climb – Alex with his training regimen and Sanni with how she copes with her emotions and fears about Alex trying such an insane thing.  The human aspect is compelling and the camera views during the climbing scenes are incredible.  This is a pretty intense documentary even if you know the outcome – in the theater, I felt my palms getting sweaty and all I was doing was sitting in an air-conditioned theater.  I definitely recommend this one, even for people who have a fear of heights.
For Venom, all I need to say is “Watch the trailer”.  If you watch it and think it looks fun and that you would enjoy it, you are right.  It is exactly what you think it will be.  The CGI is good but not great, the characters are not fully realized and the action is a bit over the top but it is funny, action-packed and a bit dark in tone.  If you watch the trailer and think the movie looks ridiculous, juvenile, and a waste of Tom Hardy’s talents, then you are also correct.  I will argue that though that it is not a waste of Tom Hardy’s talents but rather evidence of how great they are.  He makes this movie- all the other elements revolve around his performance.  In the hands of a lesser actor, the movie would not hold up.  It is genre junk and how much you like it depends on how much you like that stuff. 

For comparison, look at Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes Of Grindelwald.  This is a sequel to the Fantastic Beasts movie which was a sort of sequel to the Harry Potter movies.  In this movie, the CGI is great, it has a more light- hearted tone then Venom, the action scenes are restrained, and the movie doesn’t depend on one person to carry everything by themselves.  It is also much less fun and quite disappointing.  Even though JK Rowling wrote the screenplay, it feels like a Harry Potter knock-off.  The plot is convoluted and the characters are one-dimensional.  No actor overcomes the laborious script to provide a spark for the movie to fan into a lively flame.  The main actors I loved in the first Beasts movie- Eddie Redmayne (Newt), Katherine Watterson (Tina), Dan Fogler (Jacob) and Alison Sudol (Queenie) seem to be sleepwalking through their roles.  Queenie in fact not only seems to be sleepwalking, she seems downright possessed because everything she does in this movie contradicts what she was like in the first one.  I felt betrayed by her character’s portrayal and bored by the other’s.  Thank God that Jude Law was in it to provide a jolt in his scenes as a young Dumbledore even though it wasn’t enough to salvage film entirely. 
There aren’t enough beasts in it either.  Is there such a thing as gratuitous creature scenes?  For a movie supposedly about beasts, especially considering how much wonderous creatures contributed to the enjoyment of the first movie, they weren’t integrated very well here.  It was like they were tacked on to the script to justify the movie’s title and just used as a prop in the effort to stop Johnny Depp’s Grindelwald bad guy.  The whole endeavor felt inert. 

Bohemian Rhapsody had some problems too but overall it succeeded at what it wanted to do, which was showcasing the life or Freddy Mercury and celebrating the music of his band, Queen.  Rami Malek did a great job of becoming Freddy Mercury, revealing his insecurities and ego, conveying his talent and the excesses that harmed the band, but still keeping him likeable, relatable and somehow an underdog despite being the lead singer in one of the biggest bands in the world. 
What the film glosses over is the contributions of the other band members, what their life was like outside of Mercury’s orbit, and how the great songs in their catalog were created.  Freddy didn’t just sit down at a piano and instantly create magic by himself, as the movie mostly implies.  Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon brought their own talent to the process and in fact wrote some of the band’s bigger hits.  There are references to this but you kind of have to be in the lookout for them since they occur in throw-away lines and writing credits that scroll past in collage scenes.  I also would have liked to see a little more examination of the period after his HIV diagnosis.  How did the band work through that emotionally?  What was their relationship like at the end and as a band afterwards?  How did they create the later albums that I consider part of my favorite Queen era- The Game, The Works, A Kind Of Magic, The Miracle, and Innuendo? 

Overall though, I liked the film a lot.  I learned new things about the band, how the Live Aid appearance came about and Freddy’s lifelong friendship with Mary Austin, played by the lovely Lucy Boynton from a recent favorite movie - “Sing Street”.  It reminded me how much I liked Queen and how interesting they were.  I also got to hear some great songs played on a big theater sound system which totally immersed me in the music.  That can’t be really be recreated at home on a TV’s speakers.
Nutcracker And The Four Realms is a perfectly acceptable movie.  I say that assuming you are under 16 years old, or have never seen a fantasy movie like Chronicles Of Narnia or Alice In Wonderland before, or don’t like things that are too intense or scary, or like uncomplicated plots, or thought the animation in The Polar Express was really creepy, or think holiday themed movies need more annoying chipmunks.  If you don’t happen to feel that way though, you won’t be impressed by Nutcracker.  It has a plot that anyone over 16 has either seen before or can easily guess, it copies ideas and images from other fantasy movies, and the action and thrills are fairly sedate and tension free.  As for the chipmunks, that was a kinda freaky thing and seems to belong in some other movie.  The actors all do a decent job, including Mackenzie Foy as the leading little lady.  The real wild card in the movie though, and the reason I wanted to see this, was Keira Knightley.  
At first, I was surprised she was even in the movie - as the Sugar Plum Fairy, a ruler of one of the four realms- because it seemed like a step down for her to be a small supporting character in the quest to save the kingdom.  Then as the movie placidly chugged along, Knightley’s Sugar Plum Fairy role kept getting bigger and got more interesting and eventually cracked wide open into a bizarre performance I hadn’t seen from her before.  That redeemed the movie for me, or at least made it worth the time spent watching it instead of re-watching Frozen, or Scrooged, or Home Alone, or literally a dozen other similar movies.  So you have been warned- if you want a mostly wholesome movie for the family to watch this season and possibly crack jokes about, this is it.
I watched Colette because for about a month it was the only thing my MoviePass subscription was offering as a choice.  And because I love Keira Knightley as an actress.  She does amazing work in anything she is in and this was no exception.  Watching her as the naïve young country bride who grows into the savvy, provocative bi-sexual writer of the scandalous Claudine novels leaves me amazed at her talents.  It isn’t just the way the script is written but also how she inflects the words based on the character’s situation and the physical behaviours she uses and how body language and visual gaze play into her delivery.  I’m flabbergasted that she has never won an Academy Award and only been nominated twice.  Watch her metamorphosis in this movie and you will feel the same way.  The movie itself is very by the numbers as a historical biopic but Keira’s performance elevates the whole movie to another level.

I just saw Ralph Breaks The Internet and really enjoyed it.  “Wreck It Ralph” was a surprise animated classic a couple years ago and featured an arcade video game villain named Wreck It Ralph who longed for a change of pace and a friendly face in his mundane existence as a video bad guy.    He meets an adorable girl from the Sugar Rush Race game and they become best friends as they fight to save the characters in the games at the video arcade.  The movie worked as a commentary on friendship, about how to be a good person, and as a sly commentary on video game culture.  The new movie, where Ralph and Vanellope now have to save all of the internet rather than just their neighborhood arcade, stands alone and does a good job of delineating the characters for those who aren’t familiar with the first one.  You can see this one and still get almost all the jokes - and there are a bunch of them because the targets have expanded to include the whole internet and our social media obsessed culture.  Go see this and enjoy scenes like the one where C-3PO gives the Disney Princesses a five minute curtain call reminder or the one where Ralph becomes a screaming goat meme.  Oh, and you have to stay through at least the middle of the credits to see one of the most hilarious and slightly gross scenes in the movie but if you like to get “Rick-rolled”, then stay all the way through to the end.  The movie was loads of fun.
I don’t normally watch slasher films although I have seen some, like the whole Nightmare On Elm Street series and the Scream movies, but I consider those more of a fantasy series and a thriller series.  I think I might have watched one Halloween movie or parts of one but was interested in this Halloween because it was supposed to be more suspenseful rather than gory, a return-to-roots reboot and it featured Jamie Leigh Curtis so her tacit endorsement swayed me.  Plus the trailer was very engrossing – ominous but compelling and well-shot.  It seemed more like a vigilante movie than a slasher movie, one where Curtis’ Laurie hunts down the villainous Michael and tries to eliminate him.  In the end, it wasn’t very different than a normal slasher flick.  People did stupid things and got killed, people fought back but still got killed, people attacked the killer and supposedly beat him but he might have somehow survived.  Nothing spectacular but not bad either. 

Now speaking of vigilante movies, that is a genre I love.  I’ll watch the good ones, the bad ones, the crazy ones, all of them.  I enjoy a vigilante movie because I like seeing the struggle between good and evil and how close the protagonist comes to crossing the line between right and wrong.  All my life I have hated it when people did bad things and got away with it.  I hated the mean girls and bullies in elementary and high school, the irrational and spiteful bosses at work, the entitled jerks all around me, the scammers and criminals who get off scot free, the crooked politicians.  You get the idea- there are lots of people in the world who deserve to be punished for what they do but it never seems to happen.  I play by the rules but they don’t and they still get away with everything.  I like watching bad people get put in their place and having to face the consequences for their actions. 
Granted, a vigilante movie is a more extreme example of this desire.  The repercussions for the fictional characters are much higher than what I would want in real life but it is a vicarious thrill to see extreme retribution.   It’s kind of like playing a video game- you might shoot zombies and aliens and squash anthropomorphic mushrooms and snake in the game but you don’t really want to do that in real life.  It is really just a way of venting and relieving stress and anger. 

A couple months ago, Jennifer Garner was in the female vigilante movie Peppermint, and I saw it of course.  I enjoyed it although it wasn’t particularly original, aside from the female protagonist.  It followed the same template that many of these type movies follow- something bad happens to the hero or his family or his friends and he alone survives and seeks out the bad guys who did it and exacts revenge on them because the police won’t do anything to bring them to justice.  This basic template was established in the 1974 movie “Death Wish” with Charles Bronson.  I saw that movie and a couple of the sequels years later on VHS but I don’t recall too much from them now except that they definitely helped establish the plotline for countless movies that followed.  And that Bronson was looking really frail in the last one and I hoped he never got into a fist fight with anyone. Combine that series with the Clint Eastwood cop movies of the 1970’s, like The Gauntlet, Dirty Harry, and Magnum Force and an excitring new genre was born. 
As proof of the impact that Bronson’s movie had, Death Wish got rebooted in 2018 with Bruce Willis in the lead role.  The remake was unimpressive overall but there were several well-done scenes, like the assault of his family at home while he is at work in the hospital, the bar scene, and the walk-ups on local scumbags.  I think the reason this one didn’t work is because Willis, or the character, or both, were too detached and couldn’t make the non-violent scenes come to life so the violent scenes didn’t seem to be coming from a place of grief and anger.  That made the character seem too nihilistic and unsympathetic.  An example of how to do things right is Death Sentence, starring Kevin Bacon.  I believed Bacon’s motivation and his descent into vigilante justice and the bloodshed, although incredibly brutal, was very satisfying in a cathartic way.  This is a movie I think of as a benchmark in the genre.  Of course, nobody ever saw it but if you want a stellar example of this type of movie, this should be one you see. 

Now for things you can skip, there is The Punisher (2004) with Thomas Jane and The Punisher (1989) with Dolph Lundgren.  I don’t think I need to spend any time explaining why the Dolph Lundgren movie is skippable but for the Thomas Jane one, the problems are not as simple as wooden acting and lame action scenes.  The Punisher is a comic book character who is similar to the main character in the Executioner paperback book series.  The Punisher is an extreme vigilante – any wrong doing is punished with massive overkill.  At various points in the comics, he even hunts down superheroes because he thinks they coddle criminals.  So you would think that a movie version of the character would be a hard ass.  Nope, the 2004 movie is more like a bad version of This Is Us.  It is a group of misfits moping around in a scummy apartment building and whining about how bad their life is.  The Punisher is more of a sad sack than an agent of justice.  I almost want the bad guy, played by John Travolta, to come out victorious because he is way more charismatic and focused.  That’s what made The Punisher: War Zone (2008) so satisfying.  There was no equivocating or second guessing, just lots of action and righteous avenging.  I think I need to re-watch this because I remember absolutely nothing about this movie except that it was a necessary antidote to wash out the mealy taste left in my mouth by the 2004 movie.
Sometimes it doesn’t take brutally murdering someone’s family to turn them into a vigilante.  In the case of John Wick, all it took was stealing Wick’s car and killing his puppy.  When this movie came out, it was a welcome surprise.  I didn’t figure Keanu Reeves would be worth watching since he had flopped in so many movies since The Matrix series ended.  This gives him new life because the two, so far, John Wick movies are delicious examples of over-the-top gun play, honoring debts, doing the right thing, and never giving up until you’ve accomplished your objective.  Lots of people get killed but it isn’t really gory.  It is more of a ballet of bullets.  The first movie is the best, a noir-ish revenge thriller where the action scenes are gun battles rather than fist fights and it is another benchmark of the genre.  The second movie expands the “Wick world” and sets John Wick on a fugitive path where he has to fight to survive even though he is in the right in the conflict. 

Finally, I will point out that vigilante movies don’t have to be set in urban environments.  For example, getting back to Clint Eastwood, he did several Westerns, like Hang ‘Em High and High Plains Drifter where a wronged man sets things right.  The idea of vigilante justice originates much further back than 1974’s Death Wish.  There are other templates and other stories equally as compelling.  I loved watching Michael Douglas go batshit crazy in Falling Down as the hundreds of small injustices people face each day finally built up into overwhelming frustration and he fought back at society before finally going over the edge and becoming part of the problem.  
In Edge Of Darkness, Mel Gibson watches harm come to his daughter due to corporate greed.  He sets out to make things right and punish the immoral perpetrators.  It chronicles his near-obsession and what it costs him to get justice while also examining all those questions about right and wrong and finding where the moral line sits and deciding whether there is any justification for crossing that line.  Mel Gibson has actually done several movies with this type of theme- Mad Max and Payback are also excellent movies that examine how far a man will go to right a wrong or exact revenge. 
That is what I like about this genre - it makes me think about the what is acceptable behavior and what I would do if I am confronted with a situation that crosses that line.   I don’t think I will become a gun-toting urban vigilante but I can decide what small things I can do to a right a wrong or make things better for people that have suffered unfairly.  I can help make the world a better place in a very small way if I can see that injustices have occurred.  I like that positive impulses can come from seemingly brutal situations and violent movies can help show a way to make the world better in the end. 

Now let’s leave the bleak vigilante landscape and jump into the shiny happy world of holiday movies and Oscar bait that is barreling toward us.  I know that I am looking forward to a bunch of things- Mary Poppins Returns, The Favourite, Creed II (i.e. Rocky 4 Part 2), Green Book, Ballad Of Buster Scruggs, A Private War, Anna And The Apocalypse, Mortal Engines, Bird Box, Holmes & Watson, and Serenity.  I’ll catch you up on those once I’ve seen them.  Have a great holiday season and Happy Thanksgiving, Merry Christmas and Happy New Years!
Earlier this year:

The Meg

The Meg is exactly what you expect it to be, a somewhat entertaining movie where Jason Statham battles a monster prehistoric shark called a Megaladon.  Almost plot points were obvious and predicted by the guy sitting next to me who was shouting things at the screen.  I also predicted what would happen in the movie, based on having seen the trailer for the movie and figuring what a lazy script would do with this premise, but I didn’t shout it out loud, because decorum. 
This is probably the 10th most enjoyable shark movie I’ve seen (behind Jaws, The Shallows, Deep Blue Sea, Open Water, 47 Meters Down, Jaw 2, Shark Night, Planet Of the Sharks, Megalodon: The Monster Shark That Lives.)

Crazy Rich Asians and A Simple Favor

If you want to see a movie that is fun and entertaining but still has some depth, you should check out Crazy Rich Asians or A Simple Favor.  Crazy Rich Asians is a very well-done romantic comedy with an Asian cast and setting.  It is a high-end comedy, about how rich people are different than us poor people but still seem to have the same issues with dating, family pressures and the desire to fit in. 
A Simple Favor is a mystery that might actually be a murder mystery too and it stars Anna Kendrick, Blake Lively and - oddly enough – Henry Golding from Crazy Rich Asians.  When new friend Emily (Lively) disappears after leaving her son with Kendrick’s demure and hesitant Stephanie, Stephanie has to figure out what happened to her. She teams up with Emily’s husband (Golding) to dig into Emily’s past for clues and discovers an unexpected history that turns her from widowed mommy blogger into aspiring Nancy Drew. 

You might guess some of what happens here but you will be surprised by other things and one thing you don’t expect is that it is also really funny.  This is likely why director Paul Feig (The Heat, Spy, Ghostbusters) was drawn to the project- it was a chance to do a more dramatic movie that still played to his strengths of portraying unusual relationships and mining them for comedy.   Every actor, in both these movies, does an excellent job and I recommend them both.

Eighth Grade, Ladybird, Juliet Naked, Puzzle, and Tully
If you aren’t a fan of somewhat frivolous fare, you might want to try some of the other movies I’ve seen recently.  If you are in the mood for a contemplative meditation on how the hopes and dreams of your younger self matches up against your current reality and what actions you end up regretting, I’d suggest doing a marathon of Eighth Grade, Lady Bird, Juliet Naked, Puzzle and Tully.  It won’t be a fun binge session bill since they are all serious dramas tinged with some dark humor, but all of them get to the heart of how people act, what reality they are hoping to achieve, the wrong paths they took on their journey, and how to put yourself on a different path that leads to what you now realize is best for you.  

Eighth Grade is about how the hopes and dreams your younger self bump up against the reality of your social setting, in this case the other eighth grade students, and what you do to try to make those dreams happen.  The movie mostly examines one student who fails, heartbreakingly, to be the person she imagines herself to be and how she presents herself in video blog.  She does everything society has told her she is supposed to do to be successful- believe in herself, take calculated risks, have a social media presence, and of course cozy up to the cool kids.  What do you do once you have failed?  Do you keep trying, do you give up, do you find a different dream to follow? 
Ladybird is about a high school senior who refuses to let failure stop her.  She will not give up on her dream life and if one tactic doesn’t work, she tries another, and she continuously reinvents herself to fit the new plan.  She manipulates social settings to her advantage and sheds her old selves as she moves up each rung of the social ladder.  This movie asks whether Ladybird is a good person, if she deserves to be rewarded for her ruthless efforts, and what her success costs her.   

Juliet Naked is a little more lighthearted than the previous two movies but still shares some of the same questions.  Adapted from a Nick Hornby novel, the movie follows Annie (Rose Byrne) who has mostly set up the life her younger self had planned.  She is in a long-term relationship with an intelligent man, she is working in the family business- a curator at a local museum, she has a lovely house and several good friends.  The only thing missing is a child, something her boyfriend Duncan (Chris O’Dowd) has no interest in.  He’s too busy being a smug college professor and obsessing over forgotten musician Tucker Crowe on his blog. 
When Annie hears a remixed reissue of Crowe’s seminal album, she pans it on her boyfriend’s blog as a record company cash-grab which ironically results in her befriending Tucker Crowe.  Duncan, who is in exactly the life he imagined, doesn’t realize how well he has it, because he is only concerned about himself and sees everyone else as props who are expected to support his dreams.  This obliviousness to the feelings of others leads him to cheat on Annie and then dump her for the exciting new relationship.  I see this movie as building on the themes in Eighth Grade and Ladybird.  Annie achieved most of what she was looking for, but what happens when other people won’t let you live out the life you have set up because it isn’t what they want?  Even when you have gotten what you expected, you can be forced to re-evaluate your situation.  When this happens, do you start over and rebuild what you had or do you makes changes and try a different path?

Juliet Naked is the movie that comes closest to a happy ending and might be a good place to pause before diving into the last two which are a bit brutal.  Tully is about a mother, Marlo (Charlize Theron), who is having trouble handling her life after the recent birth of her baby.  Things get so bad she ends up taking on a night nanny to handle the baby, her kids and her household so she has a little time to get back control of her life and reconnect with her husband.  The situation is really bleak and the night nanny, Tully (MacKenzie Davis), helps her navigate the obstacles that have knocked her down and demolished the ideal life she envisioned in her earlier years.  Tully’s effervescence and effortless success forces Marlo to evaluate her past hopes and dreams and compare them to how her life has turned out and the comparison is not favorable.  Marlo ditches her responsibilities and tries to relive the life of her younger self which leads to complications and unexpected consequences.  This is the most depressing movie of the bunch but it is still very engaging because it is also the most surprising and filled with dark humor. 
The final movie in this hypothetical and contemplative marathon is Puzzle.  This film is about Agnes (Kelly MacDonald) who has everything figured out and put together the life she envisioned yet she is not happy.  The people around her either don’t respect her or they put their needs ahead of her because that is the way it has always been.  She has sacrificed her happiness for that of her family’s and is not appreciated for that.  When she gets assembles a jigsaw puzzle that was given to her as a gift, it awakens something in her and as she gets more into “puzzling”, she starts exploring the boundaries of her life and deciding where her hopes and dreams fit into the family life she has created.  The movie draws some obvious parallels between doing jigsaw puzzles and figuring out your life’s path and they are well-done and beautifully acted but there is one plot point I was not in favor of because it went contrary to my belief in who Agnes is.  Still, I was impressed by the movie despite the Hollywood cop-out towards the end.  On thing in particular that set the tone for this drama and knocked me out was the opening scene.  It was as powerful as any action movie opening sequence. 

So if you are in the mood to contemplate your life choices and where they led you, these are some movies that will help you figure out the questions to ask yourself.  They cover from middle school to high school, early adulthood to early parenthood, and finally to married life.  Now, if you are not in the mood for such serious fare, then I refer you back to Crazy Rich Asians or A Simple Favor.  Just thinking of Anna Kendrick in her car singing along to gangster rap is making me smile.  Or maybe try the fabulous Mission Impossible: Fallout, where the stakes are really high but it won’t force you to consider your own life situation.  Unless you happen to be a covert government agent out to save the world with your incredible derring-do, in which case skip the movies- we should hit a bar and you can share some of your stories with me.

Sunday, September 23, 2018

The Year In Music 2017: My Mix CD Selections & Review


Year In Music 2017 (Disc 1 of 2)

(By Richard Goodman, April & September 2018)


Fats Domino -Everybody's Got Something To Hide Except for Me And My Monkey

As you may have heard, Fats Domino died this year.  The week that it happened, I heard a few of his songs played on the radio.  Not a lot unfortunately, but a few, and the one I liked most was one I had never heard before.  It was this cover of a Beatles tune that honored the Beatles arrangements but still managed to sound entirely like Fats Domino.  I like the enthusiasm of the piano playing and how lively the whole record sounds.  I don’t know why this didn’t become a hit.


Grass Roots - I'm Living For You Girl

One of my travel agents forwarded me an email from a client and in the client‘s signature box was a link to a blogsite of his.  Just in case I ever needed to converse with that client, I decided to check out his blog since it was about music.  One of the posts was a group of studio musicians known as “The Wrecking Crew”.  I’d heard the name but didn’t know much about them so I decided to watch the documentary mentioned in the post.  The documentary was mind-blowing because it explained so much to me about why I liked some of the diverse stuff I liked.  It was because the same group of musicians was used as the backing band for all these great songs. 

The studio musicians used on the Simon & Garfunkel album “Bridge Of Troubled Water” played on the Beach Boys “Pet Sounds” and on songs like "The Lonely Bull" - Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass, "He's a Rebel" - The Crystals, "Be My Baby" - The Ronettes, "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" - The Righteous Brothers, "Mr. Tambourine Man" - The Byrds, "Monday Monday" - The Mamas & the Papas, "Never My Love" - The Association, "Up, Up and Away" - The 5th Dimension, "The Beat Goes On" - Sonny & Cher, "(They Long to Be) Close to You" - The Carpenters, "I Think I Love You" - The Partridge Family, and so on.  That is just a very tiny sample of the songs they played on.  The list goes into the hundreds of songs.  Heck, just one of the drummers in the group, Hal Blaine, played on seven consecutive “Record Of the Year” Grammy winners.  This group of studio pros is the connecting link between all the different 1960’s and early 1970’s songs I liked as I was growing up (and still like today.)  I just came across this forgotten track by the Grass Roots as I was re-listening to their stuff once I learned that The Wrecking Crew also played on their big hits. This song was not a hit and I’d never heard it before, but I love the drive and energy of it and it is a solid as their more well-known songs.


The Killers - The Man

This song is brash, and bold, and braggadocios but has a knowing wink.  They aren’t really as boastful as the character in this song but ironically, the song is so entertaining that it justifies the hubris.


Arcade Fire - Everything Now

I loved Arcade Fire’s “The Suburbs” album so much that I’ve gotten all their other stuff but unfortunately that was their peak.  The last two albums have been okay, but only one or two songs cut through the clutter and stay lodged in my brain.  I might have to start cherry-picking songs from them instead of buying whole albums in the future. 


Shania Twain - Life's About To Get Good

When I heard that Shania’s husband, Robert “Mutt” Lange, had cheated on her and was having an affair with her friend’s wife, I was sad and worried for several reasons.  Why would someone cheat on Shania, an incredibly beautiful woman, and by all accounts a good person?  What is that going to do to her career, since Lange was essential to her signature sound?  Would she start writing sad breakup songs now?  Would this delay her next album?  It turns out that yes, we would have to wait 15 years for Shania to release a new album, and it lacks the bite and catchiness of her previous work, and it has many sad breakup songs.  She eventually found love again, and talks about that long, frustrating search in this song and several others so I feel bad saying that I was very underwhelmed by the album.  I hope this song is an indication that her new songs were just a first tentative step back into the game and she will find her musical footing again and puts out more classics instead of dull, mid-tempo breakup tunes like the other songs on the new album. 


Rod Stewart - Please

This is another sob story album that I bought out of pity.  Rod has talked about having writer’s block for a decade, which explains all those Great American Songbook covers albums he did.  He just recently started writing again and the album got some good reviews so I decided to try it, since I have liked several of his albums.  Overall, it was a decent effort, a promising fresh start.  I pick this song for my 2017 mix CD because it is a solid, catchy tunes and because it has that bonkers scream in the middle of it – “Ppplllleeeeaaasssee!!!”  So bizarre to just drop that in a song, but I have to respect his passion so Rod makes it through the first cut here.  (And the two references to other Rod Stewart songs in that sentence were intentional.)


Jaime Nair - Sob O Mar

Just a lovely, soothing song I heard while scanning through channels on SiriusXM.


Jack Nitzsche - The Lonely Surfer

This is another song the showcases The Wrecking Crew.  The composer brought them all in to play on his song and I think it is an offbeat instrumental that draws you into the groove and evokes a trippy 1960’s vibe.  I got the 4-CD soundtrack to the documentary partially because of this song, partially because I wanted hear the bass part on Sonny & Cher’s “The Beat Goes On”, partially because I wanted good sounding recordings of some songs I already had on cheap sounding compilations, and also because I was unfamiliar with some of the songs and thought I might find some hidden gems, which I did.


Chris Isaak - Reverie

It has been awhile since Isaak put out anything, but he always does solid work so I got this album.  What I like best about his stuff are the little side bits that aren’t an essential part of the song but are what elevate the song from ordinary to unique.  Like on this one, the song is okay but his vocal phrasing on the chorus is what makes it distinctive to me.


Weezer - Happy Hour

Weezer has been trying to make another great album ever since Maladroit, back in 2004.  Sometimes they will get three or four really good songs at once but never quite enough for a cohesive, stellar album.  The closest they have come is with the “Red” album, Death to False Metal, and this one here (Pacific Daydream).  This is one of the better songs on the album, along with the wonderful “Beach Boys”, “Feels Like Summer” and “QB Blitz”, so if you like it then it may be time to give Weezer another try after their long run of bad albums.


Tears For Fears - I Love You But I'm Lost

T.F.F. is a group I didn’t “LOVE” initially.  I liked them in the 1980’s but mostly just the singles and not even all of them- for instance I don’t like Woman In Chains or The Working Hour or I Believe.  They were a big whiney in my opinion although I bought the greatest hits album mostly because I loved the song Sowing The Seeds Of Love.  About ten years ago, every few months I would hear the song Everybody Wants To Rule The World and it just struck me as a perfect song- it immediately puts me in a lazy, nostalgic mood where everything feels okay and there are no worries and the there is nothing I would want to change about the song or the feelings it evokes.  It has become one of my ten all-time favorite songs.  Over time, as that song and their other big hits kept getting airplay I grew to appreciate them more and started buying the individual albums and more often than not enjoyed just listening to the whole album and not worrying about the hits.  I got all the albums that no one else bought, like Elemental, Raoul And The Kings Of Spain, Everyone Loves A Happy Ending, even Roland Orzabal’s solo album Tomcats Screaming Outside.  Each one had several songs that created a mood and vibe that resonated with me and I would play the albums regularly.  They have now become one of my favorite bands even though I wouldn’t have said that about them in their heyday.  A new greatest hits compilation came out and included two new songs and this is one of the two songs and is the most “Tears For Fears’-y of the two.  Supposedly, there will eventually be another new album so that is something to look forward to but in the meantime, I can keep going back to my two favorites- Songs From The Big Chair and Everyone Loves A Happy Ending


The xx - Dangerous

This trio started out great with a low-key atmospheric sound that was somehow hooky and catchy as well.  Their next album, and the solo album Jamie XX lost the groove and were mostly just ambient background noise.  Their third album got back on track with a couple of nice numbers, particularly this one, and the lead single On Hold.


Charlie Puth - Attention

I just loved the bass sound and thought it had a great groove.


Styx - The Outpost

It has been 14 years since Styx put out an album of original material.  Part of the reason for that is because they kicked out founding member, de facto leader and primary songwriter Dennis DeYoung because they didn’t want him deciding what the band would do and disliked the more pop and Broadway tendencies of his songs because they wanted to be a Rock, with a capital “R”, band.  They weren’t happy that he kept wanting them to do concept albums like “Brave New World” and “Kilroy Was Here” so they booted him.  Once they ditched their main songwriter/lead singer/producer/keyboardist, they had a hard time writing new material and were too busy opening up for REO Speedwagon and Journey and playing at state fairs to go into the studio.  Eventually, they buckled down and teamed up with a songwriter for hire to create their new album The Mission, which is, um, a concept album about a trip to Mars that features pop-leaning songs about space exploration.  So how exactly is this different from the type of stuff Dennis DeYoung was doing?  Many of the songs are pretty good- they hired a good hired gun songwriter but they could have stuck with Dennis DeYoung and saved a lot of wasted time.


Ambrosia - Rock N' A Hard Place

Unlike some people, I have not been using Spotify mainly to look for new music and repeat play my old favorites.  I have been using it to explore unfamiliar old stuff from bands I never really paid attention to the first time around.  As a kid in the 1970’s and 1980’s, I was listening to radio and heard lots of hit songs but being a kid I didn’t have lots of disposable income to spend on full-albums from now-forgotten artists like Rupert Holmes (Escape: The Pina Colada Song), Walter Egan (Magnet And Steel), Seals & Croft, Thompson Twins, Flock Of Seagulls, Firefall, The Alarm, and this band.  Now that Spotify basically makes it free for me to test out a bunch of different things without throwing away money on a potentially bad album, I’m going back to artists that had hit singles I liked but whose full albums I had never heard before.  You may know Ambrosia from their big soft rock hits Biggest Part Of Me, How Much I Feel, and You’re The Only Woman.  I forget why I decided to give them a listen, but once I did I was surprised to found out that 1) They started as a progressive rock band, 2) Those “yacht rock” hits were the exceptions on their albums and didn’t sound like the other stuff, and 3) They had a lot of great songs I had never heard before.  I picked this one as a more representative song of theirs than the ones you may be familiar with.


Tennis - Ladies Don't Play Guitar

I know a lady who is learning guitar so the title caught my attention and since I kinda like the band, I got this song.  The title is ironic by the way.


Washed Out - Feel It All Around (Portlandia theme)

Now that the often excellent TV series Portlandia is ending, I wanted to be able to hear the moody, sorrowful, offbeat theme song whenever I wanted so that is why it is on my list this year. 


Spoon - Shotgun

Similar to what I wrote about Tears For Fears, Spoon has crept up on me and is now a favorite band.  This is a typically spiky, catchy song from their most recent album.


U2 - The Blackout

I go through periods of loving U2 and thinking they are over-rated and too self-important.  Their last album leaned towards over-rated but this song, and a couple others, were welcome detours towards “good U2”.  I’ve also started appreciating some of the smaller flourishes, like a guitar riff or a vocal twist, that they put on various songs even though I still might not be wild about the overall song itself.  This song has a nice funky bass riff that naturally flows into the next selection on my 2017 CD which is….


Bootsy Collins - Hot Saucer (w/ Musiq Soulchild)

You might not know it but I really like funk, in the vein of Prince, George Clinton, Cameo, etc…  Bootsy used to be in Parliament Funkadelic but lately has kept busy with his solo stuff since P-Funk has been inactive for a while.  He put out a really good album last year where he collaborated with various singers, musicians and writers who complemented his own playing, singing and writing.  This is a typical bonkers Bootsy song.

           

Year In Music 2017 (Disc 2 of 2)


Queens Of The Stone Age - Feet Don't Fail Me

I think Mark Ronson is a great producer and has brought out the best in artists like Amy Winehouse, Lily Allen, Bruno Mars, and now hard rock outfit Queens Of the Stone Age.  Ronson also co-writes songs as well as producing them, so he is more like a collaborator than a producer, kind of like what Danger Mouse does.  The partnership worked since I like this album more than any other QOTSA albums I’ve heard.  I’m hoping that the rumour that he is working with Miley Cyrus either doesn’t pan out or else he helps her create her best album ever because I don’t want him wasting his talents creating mediocrity. 


The Revivalists - Wish I Knew You

I heard this on Sirius XM and liked it.  Nothing else on the album jumped out at me but this song is solid.


Alice Merton - No Roots

Also from Sirius XM- it has a unique song that made me stop on it when I was scanning through channels.  She only has an EP out with this great song, another really good one and two other okay tracks.  I’m hoping this coming year brings a full-length from her.


The Fortunes - Here Comes That Rainy Day Feeling Again

This is an old song but is one of those that I love every time I hear it and just want to plat it on repeat.  I’m including it because some people may not have heard it and it would be a shame to deprive them of that pleasure.


Gary Numan - My Name Is Ruin

I debated putting this song on the mix CD because it is a bit of an abrasive style and has a long running time but I like the sound it creates and not everything is a happy feel good song.  Plus, when is the last time you heard a new Gary Numan song?  Speaking of which, I might have to go explore his back catalog next on Spotify – prior to his new album I’d only heard his single Cars and never a whole album.


First Aid Kit - My Silver Lining

I first heard this a couple years ago and loved the haunting vocal sound.  I listen to it occasionally and when I checked to see which year’s mix CD I had put it on, I was surprised to see that I hadn’t put it on any so I’m rectifying that now.  


Shakespears Sister - Hot Room

When Siobhan Fahey left Bananarama, she created this short-lived but stellar duo/group.  They put out two fantastic albums before breaking up.  12 years later, Fahey released the album that she had been working on before the dissolution of the group.  It was interesting- it had both some forward looking songs and some songs that fit in with prior work.  Then nine years ago and seven years ago, she released two more albums under the Shakespears Sister moniker.  Both of those were good, but still nothing like the first two albums.  This song is from the fourth album.


Juliana Hatfield – Rhinoceros

Juliana thought she was done with music because she was running out of ideas she wanted to pursue.  Then something happened that pissed her off so much that an entire album (Pussycat) just flowed out of her in response.  Not only did she come back with new music that ranks among her best, but she has since put out another album, a covers album of Olivia Newton John Songs as an antidote to the anger and loudness of Pussycat, and is working on more original material.  I’m very glad that she got pissed off!  What caused her to get mad?  That would be Donald Trump’s election and his behavior in office.  If you are a Trump fan though, you can still enjoy the album- she never addresses him by name or position.  Most references are oblique, such as “Short Fingered Man”, “When You’re A Star”, “Kellyanne” and “Heartless”.  The closest she comes to directness is this song, which has so many clues that you know it is about our current president.  It is also the most brutal song on the album.  Unlike The Hulk, I like her when she is angry.


Bleachers - Don't Take the Money

Heard on Sirius XM and loved it.  Nothing else on the album was equal to this song though. 


Fleetwood Mac - Ooh My Love

I’ve always loved Fleetwood Mac, mostly because of Lindsey Buckingham (and also Bob Welch in their earlier incarnation) so when they released a deluxe edition of the Tango In The Night, I had to get it because of all the rare and unreleased material.  This song was one of those unreleased extras but I like it better than some of the songs on the album.  If Seven Wonders was a single, then this song should have been too.


Kylie Minogue - Nothing Can Stop Us

Gotta have a Kylie song.  I love the little tweeting riff here and everything she does is exemplary.  Except for her most recent album, but that is a 2018 mix CD discussion.


Ennio Morricone - A Fistful Of Dynamite

In 2017 I was listening to instrumentals quite a bit.  I went through a lot of back catalog stuff for Henry Mancini and Ennio Morricone and found some great stuff.  I think what was appealing to me was the craftmanship of the songs and how they relied on great musicians and great melodies instead of auto-tune and studio tricks to turn a dull beat into a hit.  This is a good one that I wanted to share from Morricone since I shared a Mancini one last year.


Robert Plant - Carry Fire

Every time Robert Plant puts out an album, I get excited.  He has a great track record as a solo artist.  There is always something to recommend from them and many of the albums are brilliant.  He is also a favorite artist of mine without even considering his Led Zeppelin stuff in the conversation.  This was one of his weaker entries but that still makes it better than most artists best stuff.  This is the title song for the album.


Randy Newman - Putin

When he played this on Saturday Night Live, I got a kick out of it and just had to get it.  It’s a nice companion to his 1970’s song “Short People”.


Juliana Hatfield - I Wanna Be Your Disease

Another track from her Pussycat album.  I told you I really liked the album!


Paul McCartney - Figure Of Eight

This is one of my favorite songs on a favorite McCartney album.  A reissue came out this year and I’m including this song since I wasn’t doing a CD when this album came out.  Heck- I was still in college at the time!


Paul Young - Slipped, Tripped And Fell In Love

I also listened to old Paul Young albums on Spotify but unlike Ambrosia, Young was correctly evaluated and correctly recognized during his period of fame.  There isn’t anything great but undiscovered on his old albums.  However, he put out a really good new album a couple of years ago.  There are four or five really good tracks that are worth a listen.  This one is my favorite.


Charlatans - Different Days

Just a good song from a journeyman band.


Lindsey Buckingham & Christine McVie - In My World

Linsey Buckingham and Christine McVie started writing songs for a new Fleetwood Mac album but when Stevie Nicks declined to participate in contributing any songs or vocals since she was too busy on her solo tour, they went ahead and released it as a duo album called Buckingham / McVie.  It just happened to include the other members of Fleetwood Mac, aside from Nicks, on bass and drums so really this was a Fleetwood Mac but wasn’t called that in deference to Nicks since she hadn’t participated.  If only they had known how 2018 would turn out, the duo might not have picked a title that poked a little fun at Stevie Nicks’ expense by referencing the Buckingham / Nicks album that the couple recorded before joining Fleetwood Mac.  I’m still flabbergasted at the unnecessary coup that happened in Fleetwood Mac as a result, but again- that is a 2018 CD discussion.  Let’s leave 2017 with this innocent, optimistic fun song and pretend that 2018 won’t happen. 




My Favorite Albums Of 2017               

1              Juliana Hatfield: Pussycat

2              Lindsey Buckingham & Christine McVie: Buckingham / McVie

3              Dennis DeYoung: One Hundred Years From Now

4              Wrecking Crew performers: Wrecking Crew, The

5              Dandy Warhols: The Black Album & Come On Feel…

6              Pixies: Doolittle: 25 (Deluxe Reissue)

7              Chris Rea: Still So Far To Go: Best Of Chris Rea

8              Fleetwood Mac: Tango In the Night (Deluxe Edition)

9              Spoon: Hot Thoughts

10           Queens Of the Stone Age: Villains

11           Bootsy Collins: World Wide Funk

12           Ambrosia: One Eighty

13           Shakespeare's Sister: Songs From The Red Room

14           Weezer: Pacific Daydream

15           Chris Isaak: First Comes The Night

16           Sheryl Crow: Be Myself

17           Paul Young: Good Things

18           Styx: The Mission

19           Animotion: Raise Your Expectations

20           U2: Songs Of Experience (Deluxe Edition)

21           Grass Roots: Leaving It All Behind

22           Shakespeare's Sister: Cosmic Dancer

23           Ambrosia: Ambrosia

24           America: Back Pages

25           Ennio Morricone: Collected


The 10 Most Disappointing Albums Of 2017

1              Ray Davies: Americana

2              Billy Squier: Signs Of Life

3              Poco: Blue & Gray

4              Gorillaz: Humanz

5              Aimee Mann: Mental Illness

6              Justin Hayward: Songwriter

7              Barry Gibb: In The Now

8              Donnas, The: Spend The Night

9              Demi Lovato: Tell Me You Love Me

10           Killers, The: Wonderful Wonderful


Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Saturday Morning Cartoons Revisited

(By Richard Goodman, 20 June 2018)

I’m off from work today, so for fun I decided to watch some classic Hanna-Barbera cartoons from the 1970’s.  Some of the selections are shows I fondly remember.  Others are things I don’t recall ever seeing before, which is odd because with only three television channels you’d think I would have watched everything possible.  Maybe even back then scheduling conflicts kept me from watching stuff- for instance, if The Superfriends was on, I’m sure I wouldn’t have switched over to another channel.  I do have some thoughts about this selection of cartoons which might be contrary to my thoughts when I was a kid:
Scooby Doo is the template for many of the Hanna Barbera shows- the group of precious teenagers, the funny humanistic pet, “The Mystery Machine” van, solving crime, spooky ghosts, running in and out of doors and rooms in a house, and so on.  If you didn’t watch Scooby, you missed out on a childhood pleasure and probably never watched cartoons.  This episode has the cameo kings of the 1970s- The Harlem Globetrotters- and a ghost pirate ship and a spooky inn.

I remember watching Yogi Bear as a kid but the episode of “Yogi’s Gang” here is weird.  It has Yogi, Boo Boo, and other Yogi friends like Snaggle Puss and Huckleberry Hound but they are on a flying ark!  And they get attacked in mid-air by a greedy genie riding a giant flying lamp.  It’s a decent episode about greed and what is really important in life but I still can’t get over the flying ark!  Was a van too passé?  If this was a recurring thing, I either didn’t watch this show or blocked out the ark out of my mind.
Goober & the Ghost Chasers sounds familiar but I don’t recall watching it regularly and after seeing this episode I must applaud my younger self’s taste.  This is an awful Scooby Doo knock-off- a group of friends and a dog travel around in a van and solve mysteries.    And for some reason, the dog turns invisible when frightened.  And this is not a big deal! 

Amazing Chan And The Chan Clan – seems to be based on Charlie Chan but it also throws in a Scooby Doo type crime solving group of kids along with a Josie & The Pussycats musical interlude with the kids at the beginning of the episode.  For some reason the theme song is not sung- it is whispered.  Bizarre.  This episode has them running around England looking for some thieves who stole a royal artifact from the royal palace.  Of course, a suit of armor comes to life and chases the kids around the palace.  Yep, Scooby DNA right there and for the Josie template they close with another musical number by the kids, although the Asian kids in the band don’t sound very Asian on the song.
The Roman Holidays- I have absolutely no recollection of this ever existing.  It seems like a knock-off of The Flintstones but with a Roman theme.  The family pet in this one is, of course, a lion.  The family is a bit more upper class though.  The guys all look like either Fred Flintstone or Shaggy / Fred from Scooby Doo and the women all look like Ann Margaret or Jane Russell.   It could be that Hanna-Barbera used the same animation studio for all their shows so they have a similar look to them.  It’s not too bad, for a kid’s cartoon.

There was also an episode of Batman and Robin.  All I can say about that episode and that permutation of a Batman series is who the heck thought Bat Mite was a good idea?  Bat Mite spent the whole episode creating havoc and putting the heroes in danger by ignoring Batman’s orders.  Then when Batman or Robin or both chewed him out, he started crying and saying he would leave until the heroes calmed him down and made him promise to listen to them.   Then 15 seconds later he ignored his promise.  Bat Mite is beyond useless and annoying.  He is Scrappy Doo times ten.
Josie & the Pussycats is like a female driven version of Scooby Doo but with several gratuitous musical segments thrown in at various points during the show.  Everyone knows about this show and probably fondly remembers it.  This episode has them meeting Captain Nemo and preventing him from sinking all the ships he encounters.  I think Casey Kasem, the voice of Shaggy from Scooby Doo, also voices a character on this show.

The Funky Phantom is similar to all the other Scooby rip-off shows except that here one of the people in the group of mystery solving friends is the ghost of a Revolutionary War solider and his ghost cat.  The ghost is weirdly voiced by the person who also voiced SnagglePuss but the ghost is the most likable person in the group.  The other characters are either vain, obnoxious or bullies.  OMG- the villain in this episode, the “ghost” of Jean Laffite, just said “I would have gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for you meddling kids”!  Talk about a Scooby wanna-be!  I kinda remember watching this show but it wasn’t a favorite.

Speed Buggy was just awful.  There is no need to discuss it, much less to ever watch it.
Hong Kong Phooey, voiced by Scatman Crothers, features the incompetent but lovable janitor slash martial arts superhero Hong Kong Phooey.  I didn’t remember him as being this gullible and lucky but it is still an amusing show.
I still want to see episodes of some other Hanna-Barbera shows I remember watching and loving, like Space Ghost, The Herculoids, Atom Ant, The Banana Splits, but this was a fun way to pass a couple hours inside with the AC on during a steamy summer day.