Thursday, December 29, 2011

'Blackthorn' movie review

'Blackthorn' movie review -- 'Blackthorn' showtimes - The Boston Globe


Playing the aging outlaw Butch Cassidy, Sam Shepard is the nominal star of “Blackthorn,’’ and he’s fine - grizzled and laconic in the best western tradition. He keeps getting upstaged by the cinematography, though.

The movie’s an international coproduction that marks the feature directing debut of Spanish screenwriter Mateo Gil (“Open Your Eyes,’’ “The Sea Inside’’); he and director of photography Juan Ruiz Anchía filmed in the high country of Bolivia, and the thin mountain air seems to have seeped into the camera. Each frame is a crystalline jaw-dropper that places the smallish actions of men within a vast canvas of lush jungle, lunar salt flats, Andean snow, and desert sand. The result is a pretty good movie that almost looks better than it needs to.

It plays like a Sergio Leone spaghetti western with the cynicism replaced by exhaustion and regret. Butch falls in with a hapless civil engineer, Eduardo (Spanish heartthrob Eduardo Noriega), who has stolen $50,000 from fat-cat mine owners and is being tailed by a particularly mean posse. The most satisfying moments in “Blackthorn’’ let us see Butch through the younger man’s eyes, as Eduardo slowly comes to appreciate the depth of the outlaw’s mastery. He still doesn’t know who this old gringo is, but he’s definitely somebody.

After a while, Gil lets the movie stall in a sort of high-plains drift, and he lets the camerawork do most of the heavy lifting. You don’t mind. There’s a beautiful showdown on the salt flats in which Butch doesn’t outshoot a pursuer so much as outlast him, each man on his straining, plodding horse.


Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Cleopatra, Rome, Alexandria - A Life

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5 of 5 stars
Read in December, 2011

Cleopatra: A Life (Hardcover) Stacy Schiff - Little, Brown

I spent all day yesterday reading this book. There are so many reviews here, I thought I would just add the point that I learned so much about Egypt and Alexandria, its wealth and beauty. I could feel the warmth and salt air. Sad to think the old city is so gone, so much under water now. I loved this book. Didn't think Schiff could improve on "Vera". Wonderful writer! I had a little trouble getting started, but when I did I couldn't stop. This book makes so clear the rough and poor quality of the city of Rome at the time, in comparison to Alexandria. And Schiff is a genius to have brought Cleopatra to life with so many gaps in the sources. I really wondered when our book club chose it to read, why such a well-worn old story. Then the towering queen came to life with all her strength, education, languages, pageantry. Wonderful book!

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Review of film "Beginners" Ewan McGregor and Christopher Plummer

Gattopardo Dec 24/2011 - I didn't like this movie.  I thought Christopher Plummer played a selfish man who only had a passing interest in why his son could make no commitments.  I was more interested in the mother -- I'd like to know why she stuck with her bad deal of a marriage.  I also could not get a clue as to why the son loved his father so much.  The gay factor in all this was not done well I felt.  A man as closeted as Plummer might come out, but with all this fanfare?  Also, the son's girlfriend was too phony.  And this ridiculous situation - the fancy hotel, the girl's arch mannerisms - ecch.  And this was supposed to represent his coming to terms with a solid relationship? The young men driving around town painting on buildings for fun?  The odd filming techniques and pastiches intercut in the filming?  Why did none of the reviews warn us?
   The only thing that kept us watching was the charming dog, Arthur; an adorable Jack Russell terrier.

Friday, December 9, 2011

The Hare With Amber Eyes

I loved reading this book written by a perceptive and caring artist about his family and their history.  Edmund de Waal writes about the Ephrussi with such attention to detail about their homes, their cities (Paris, Vienna, Odessa, Tokyo) and the objects they owned and clothes they wore.  It was like poetry to read his analyses of why certain objects (a collection of nearly 130 netsuke the author inherited provide a linking cord through the novel) can have meaning and influence.  I've never encountered a book quite like it.  The larger story is the family moving from great wealth to poverty during World War II, but the author has closed in with skill show their daily lives and the art objects they collected, books they read and all the fascinating friends they knew. The Parisian Charles Ephrussi never worked in the family banking business (they were on a par with the Rothschilds), he knew Proust (who had a character in his books based on Charles).  He knew Renoir (and many of the Impressionists).  He is even in Renoir's painting Bathers on the Seine (gentleman in a top hat). I bought the book in paperback at Costco recently.  I am sad that it is over, but the holiday season beckons, nay demands, my attention now.