Sometimes a Good Notion

How To Survive A Plague

The movie that I was the most excited for last year was a documentary by David France called How To Survive a Plague.  The film follows ACT UP during the early days of the AIDS crisis.  Maybe someday I’ll write my thoughts on the film. For now however I just wanted to celebrate its Oscar nomination in the Best Documentary category.  There are very few films that I would deem ‘important’  this is one of those.  Go see it if you haven’t.

http://surviveaplague.com/

hsap

Below is an interview with David France from PBS Newshour

http://video.pbs.org/video/2311582066&#8243

Oscar Nomination Reactions – The Best Ever

Somewhere in the internet a movie fan typed:

Harvey, you mother f$*#%^!

And summed up Oscars 2013

Memorable Shorts from 2012 – The Piano Tuner

The Piano Tuner directed by Olivier Trenier is quite older than 2012 but I was only able to see it last year.   It is a lesson in getting to the point and getting out before the audience can start asking too many questions. This short film tells the story of a failed musician so desperate for sympathy that he pretends to be blind as he makes a living as a piano tuner. The film is all set up, but the premise is intriguing and the character and actor are charming. It’s easy to see the humor and desperation in what he’s doing. Then, about 8 minutes into this story something quite delightful happens … the story becomes a thriller. 

This is solid work all around, just remember not to ask too many questions.

Script of the Week: Rodham by Young Il Kim

The story of a young Hillary Rodham as she struggles to choose between a career as a hot-shot Washington lawyer and the love of her life, an indomitable Bill Clinton. The script by Il Young Kim (nom de plume?) focuses on Hillary as she works in the committee to impeach Richard Nixon and weighs a marriage proposal from Bill.

Young-Bill-Hillary-bill-clinton-9773733-531-411The writer handles the subject matter delicately and cinematically.  This is not a bio-pic in any sense.  Kim aims for the essence of Hillary rather than a portrayal of historical truth.  It allows him to delve deeply into the character’s emotional life and present us with a Hillary that is saucy, sexy, full of urges and contradictions.  She is Hillary as we have not seen her before or at least not thought about before.  The Bill we get is equally interesting but for inherently different reasons.  He is exactly how we imagine him to have been.  He loves Hillary madly but just can’t help being himself … totally and completely wrong for her.  This dynamic keeps the script fun and makes it a compelling read even making us wonder (if only temporarily) if they’ll end up together.

We are informed by history of course.  As I read this script there are moments so shock full of irony you can’t help but point them out and go “ha!”. A young Jim McDougal talking about waterfront property;  A Bill that flirts with anything with two legs and a skirt;  A young Hillary that believes a woman will be President before a black man;  The countless characters who all know Hillary is going to be that woman; And most importantly the young ambitious lawyer who helps define an impeachment process that would decades later be used against her husband.  History also informs how we cheer for Hillary, her eventual happiness is always in our sights.  With so much information about her tumultuous marriage I couldn’t help but hope she would dump Bill and end up with the dashing Weld.  I knew how the story would end of course, but my hoping is a trick the writer deserves immense credit for.

If there are any faults with Rodham is that Kim has chosen a period of time so compelling in its own right that it sometimes outshines the character’s story.  Hillary’s time on the House Judiciary Committee that investigated Nixon is replete with intrigue and interesting characters, many of whom are still players in the current political stage. As a political junkie I ate it up and even found myself wishing that the story was solely focused on her work during that time. Alas, as we all know, for the Clintons work and self are never far apart and so it is with this script. At the end I do not know how accurate or well researched the script is, but I know it made me go running for the internet yearning to learn more.  Any script that does that is good in my book.

A Chat With David O. Rusell – NY Times

 

 

Memorable Shorts from 2012 – The Beauty Inside

This is a webseries and a compelling piece of branded media. The concept is simple — Alex wakes up as a different person every day. Physically different that is, inside he is always the same. The story is narrated by the real Alex as he ventures to find love and himself despite his unusual condition.

The film/series is also a “social film”  and a creative use of new media for the digital age.   Professional and student film makers are always asking the question, “how do I build an audience?”.  The Beauty Inside answers that question rather innovatively: put the audience in the movie. 

Check out the short behind the scenes look below:

As a piece of literature

 

“I don’t write a blueprint. I want the script to work as a piece of literature” – Tarantino on scriptwriting


Memorable Shorts from 2012 – (notes on) biology

If my students doodled like this in class I would give them all an A

Script of the Week: Seuss by Eyal Podell and Jonathon Stewart

Seuss tells the story of Ted Geisel, AKA Dr. Seuss, as he struggles to become the writer we  all love.  The story is divided into two timelines.  The first revolves around a young Seuss as he heads off to Dartmouth and meets  Helen who he later marries.  The second  concerns Seuss, now in the middle of his career, as he struggles to deal with Helen’s illness and  prepares to write The Cat in the Hat.  The stories read as a series of flashbacks and flash forwards that are weaved together by Helen’s constant love and desire to push Seuss to embrace his own eccentricities and become the man he came to be.  I walked into this script with high expectations and was moved by some of the storytelling, particularly in the third act. However, I couldn’t help feeling that there is more to this story than is being presented on the page.

This is a Seuss rife with insecurities about his future. Propagated by a father, T.R., whose one desire is to see his son grow to be a responsible man, both young and old Seuss spend the movie in various stages of doubt about their abilities and their futures.  Fortunately for them both they have Helen who encourages them forward with blooming affection.  In addition, Seuss also has a mother, Henrietta, who from a very early age  encourages his fantasies but is helpless to stop T.R.’s assaults on Seuss’ confidence. Both Helen and Henrietta struggle to encourage Seuss to embrace who he is without doubt or remorse. They are interchangeable characters and in this lies the primary problem of the script.

Dr__Seuss_Quote_by_pianoxlove112The relationships, as written, are honest and moving but each timeline is just repetition. What happens in the past is still happening in the present. The parallels between the stories are clear but the script fails in using them to complement each other. They are in essence the same story and it never moves forward until the third act. Helen and Henrietta repeat  different versions of the same mantra — be yourself, be yourself, be yourself — until it feels like a cliche.  Troubling as well is a father figure who never, not even in Seuss’ darkest moments, gets an opportunity to redeem himself.  He is too clear an antagonist rather than a man with his own conflicted feelings about his son’s future or his love for Seuss. These three characters are in desperate need of arcs.

It is not just the supporting characters that are problematic however. Seuss himself never feels quite realized. He never expresses desire or need. His eccentricities and talent strike us as just that. He can draw and come up with funny names for ordinary things but his genius is not a burning passion that he simply cannot be without.  Why is it important that he see things this way? Not even love makes Seuss act or fight because it comes too easy.  Women simply replace each other, fullfil their duty, and in the process perpetuate stasis.

What was most surprising is that by the end of the story we still don’t know how Seuss sees the world. A man such as Seuss must have had a fantasy life incomparable to other men. Yet, only on two occasions in this script do his characters come to life. Those moments are welcome reprieves in what is overwhelmingly a stale script because they give us a sense of how Seuss copes with life, love, disappointment, and death. More of that, please.

Memorable Shorts From 2012 – The Division of Gravity

Directed by Rob Chiu

Shot and scored beautifully, The Division of Gravity puts words to the emotion rather than the narrative and succeeds in creating an intimate portrait.  It feels personal and complete. I find the way in which the characters think of their relationship to be honest. These images aren’t mired in action and reaction, the moment they met, the moment they moved in, etc.  The highs are much smaller and personal. They are caresses, kisses, and pictures taken while the lows are explosive as they usually are, and as we usually remember them to be.

 

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