Sunday, December 31, 2006
Tuesday, December 26, 2006
The Good Shepherd
And why did they cast the son with lips bigger than his mother (A. Jolie)? They both look freakish and distracting.
Monday, December 25, 2006
Friday, December 22, 2006
NYC
Visiting Manhattan last weekend, I became enamored with the Edward Hopper exhibition at the Whitney Museum. I even bought stuff in the gift shop, which I almost never do. I'm reading "The Essential Edward Hopper" right now.
Early Sunday Morning
1930
Oil on canvas
35 x 60 in.
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Thursday, December 21, 2006
The Holiday
However, there was one shining standout episode when Jude Law's character reveals he has two daughters as a widower. Normally, children are either awful actors or exploited for the cute factor, but here, the whole sequence works. Finally, more than half way through the film is an "out-of-body" series of scenes where all 4 actors (Law, Diaz and the cheer-dren) are present to the scene, not hamming it up and the saccharine abates momentarily as they lay in a bedroom tent side-by-side. It's a magnificent sequence in an otherwise dippy movie.
Saturday, December 02, 2006
Smell the Horse
The new Neil Young release is old: live from 1970. With the late Danny Whitten on vocals and guitar in the earliest incarnation of Crazy Horse, Neil's longtime and occasional backup band, the music crackles with dueling guitars and shared vocals. Whitten seems to push Neil in the vocal area, challenging him non-offensively to jump hurdles with confidence. This CD really captures a tight performance. These renditions sound similar to the studio versions, a good thing, unlike later versions throughout the years where form and content receive updates.
The six songs:
1. Everybody Knows This Is Nowhere
A galloping rock sing-a-long. Fantastic opener. "I gotta get out of this day to day runnin' around".
2. Winterlong
The studio version is hard to beat but this live version gives a fresh perspective in the vocals. Sounds like Whitten on lead vocal and Neil pushing his limits on the harmony track. "You seem to be where I belong".
3. Down By The River
12' 22" of heaven. Of a pair with Cowgirl, written in the same bout of fever. Like its sister, this one features a major-minor 2-chord background for some Crazy Horse jamming. Every two-bit guitarist like me has played along with this one for hours. The crunchy chords in the lead guitar are full of fiber and substance.
4. Wonderin'
Nice.
5. Come On Baby Let's Go Downtown
High energy. Great vocals.
6. Cowgirl In The Sand
15 minutes of more 2-chord jams. The guitar tone is identical to the studio version but we get the "liberty" of open-ended jamming. Doesn't matter where you rate Neil Young in the pantheon of electric rock guitarists, try again, you're too low.
Friday, December 01, 2006
For Your Consideration
The best scenes are when the 3 actors don't receive their Oscar nominations. Each is home alone at 5 a.m. to suffer the indignity of dashed hope. It's a genuinely dramatic sequence in a comedy film. The fact that the least likely actor sleeps through his nomination-notifying phone call is telling.
All in all, it's worth seeing but not great.
From George Will...
Adams declared that “phylosophy looks with an impartial Eye on all terrestrial religions,” and told a correspondent that if they had been on Mount Sinai with Moses and had been told the doctrine of the Trinity, “We might not have had courage to deny it, but We could not have believed it.” It is true that the longer he lived, the shorter grew his creed, and in the end his creed was Unitarianism.
Jefferson, writing as a laconic utilitarian, urged his nephew to inquire into the truthfulness of Christianity without fear of consequences: “If it ends in a belief that there is no god, you will find incitements to virtue in the comforts and pleasantness you feel in its exercise, and the love of others which it will procure you.”
Madison, always common-sensical, briskly explained — essentially, explained away — religion as an innate appetite: “The mind prefers at once the idea of a self-existing cause to that of an infinite series of cause & effect.” When Congress hired a chaplain, he said “it was not with my approbation.”
In 1781, the Articles of Confederation acknowledged “the Great Governor of the World,” but six years later the Constitution made no mention of God. When Hamilton was asked why, he jauntily said, “We forgot.” Ten years after the Constitutional Convention, the Senate unanimously ratified a treaty with Islamic Tripoli that declared the United States government “is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion.”