This movie was more political than I expected. I went to see it just knowing that it was a comedy about a couple that had fallen on hard times and turned to a life a crime. That's accurate, but it's more than that. Dick (Jim Carrey) worked for a company called Globodyne. He had just been promoted to vice president and convinced his wife to quit her job when the company dramatically collapsed. The parallels to Enron were pretty clear. As with Enron, the employees' pension plans consisted of company stocks, so Dick and Jane (Tea Leoni) lost everything. Neither one could find another job. Jane took part in a cosmetic study to earn a whopping $14 and has a really bad reaction. Dick got a job at Kostmart, where he lasted about a day. In the employees' training room, there was a huge anti-union sign. As he was leaving after being fired, Dick yelled something about them not paying enough to support a family anyway. The parallels to Wal-Mart were pretty clear. Dick then tries to get work in jobs that mostly fall to illegal aliens and gets deported. His wife has to help sneak him back over the border.
Dick and Jane sell everything they can, but they don't sell their house. With the collapse of Globodyne, property values had fallen, and they would have actually ended up owing money if they sold. Nearing foreclosure, they turn to a life of crime out of desperation.
Anyway, all of this doesn't really sound like much of a comedy, but it's actually pretty funny. There is the physical comedy, of course. Dick and Jane also get themselves into some highly amusing situations, like trying to rob a bank and running into other former Globodyne employees trying to do the same thing. I really enjoyed this movie, but I would imagine politically conservative individuals would not.
Thursday, December 29, 2005
Monday, December 26, 2005
Random Thought #12: Baking Cookies with your Cat
I just realized that it has been over three months since I have posted a random thought. This one isn't actually all that random. My mother showed me an email that she got and since it is absolutely hilarious and cat-related, I decided to post it here. Obviously I didn't make this up myself; I don't know who did. If anyone out there does know, let me know and I will be happy to give proper credit.
Baking Cookies with your Cat:
1. Look in cookbook for cookie recipe.
2. Get cup of coffee.
3. Get cat off cookbook.
4. Find that special recipe.
5. Get cat's nose out of coffee mug.
6. Go the fridge and get eggs.
7. Get dry ingredients from cupboard.
8. Break eggs in small bowl.
9. Sift dry ingredients in large bowl.
10. Answer the phone.
11. Cat ate eggs; get more from fridge.
12. Get cat out of flour bowl and dust cat off.
13. Get Band-Aids for scratches on hands.
14. Throw flour out and get more.
15. Preheat oven for cookies.
16. Looking at cat and wanting to bake cat now. Cat runs for cover into bathroom.
17. Flour the counter to roll out cookie dough.
18. Big crash in bathroom; run to see what happened.
19. Cat has TP all over floor, stuff spilled and knocked over on top of bathroom counter.
20. Yell at cat. Cat falls in toilet bowl.
21. Can sense cat is angry.
22. Take cat out of toilet to dry cat off.
23. Get bandages to cover more scratches on arms and legs.
24. Clean up bathroom.
25. Hear a thump in kitchen. . .oh golly, now what?
26. Get cat off floured counter in kitchen.
27. Try to pick out cat hairs from flour.
28. Step on cat's tail and get bitten.
29. Get coat, car keys, and go to store to buy cookies!!!
Baking Cookies with your Cat:
1. Look in cookbook for cookie recipe.
2. Get cup of coffee.
3. Get cat off cookbook.
4. Find that special recipe.
5. Get cat's nose out of coffee mug.
6. Go the fridge and get eggs.
7. Get dry ingredients from cupboard.
8. Break eggs in small bowl.
9. Sift dry ingredients in large bowl.
10. Answer the phone.
11. Cat ate eggs; get more from fridge.
12. Get cat out of flour bowl and dust cat off.
13. Get Band-Aids for scratches on hands.
14. Throw flour out and get more.
15. Preheat oven for cookies.
16. Looking at cat and wanting to bake cat now. Cat runs for cover into bathroom.
17. Flour the counter to roll out cookie dough.
18. Big crash in bathroom; run to see what happened.
19. Cat has TP all over floor, stuff spilled and knocked over on top of bathroom counter.
20. Yell at cat. Cat falls in toilet bowl.
21. Can sense cat is angry.
22. Take cat out of toilet to dry cat off.
23. Get bandages to cover more scratches on arms and legs.
24. Clean up bathroom.
25. Hear a thump in kitchen. . .oh golly, now what?
26. Get cat off floured counter in kitchen.
27. Try to pick out cat hairs from flour.
28. Step on cat's tail and get bitten.
29. Get coat, car keys, and go to store to buy cookies!!!
Sunday, December 25, 2005
Book Review--Prep, by Curtis Sittenfeld
I seem to be reading a lot of first novels lately, all good. Prep is about a middle-class girl's experience at a boarding school. Bored at her public junior high school in South Bend, Indiana, Lee Fiora takes it upon herself to send away for boarding school catalogues and apply. Both she and her parents were surprised when she got in. Her parents couldn't afford such luxury, but when the Ault School in Massachusetts offered her a scholarship that paid for three-quarters of her tuition, they let Lee go.
Lee finds the experience to be more than she bargained for. The teenagers at Ault are rich and sophisticated. As a scholarship student, Lee feels like an outsider. Furthermore, good grades don't come as easily to her at Ault as they did when she was in junior high in South Bend. Still, she never seems to seriously consider going home (I think I would have lasted about a week). She stays for her entire four years of high school.
It's unclear to me whether Lee was better off for the experience or not. It seems to me that the experiences of adolescence--massive insecurity, the intensity of her relationships, peer and academic pressure--are greatly amplified by her boarding school experience. I can so clearly remember thinking many of her thoughts when I was in high school, but being so far from home and among students of a different social class would have to make things so much harder. Plus, it didn't get her into a more prestigious college, and even if it had, I'm not sure it would have been worth it. As the character herself points out, you have your whole life to leave your parents.
I loved this book; as I mentioned, I can remember thinking many of Lee's same thoughts and thus really identified with her, though I never went to boarding school (actually, I entertained thoughts of boarding school for about a week in eighth grade; my parents correctly figured that it was just a phase and waited for it to pass). But the painful experience of adolesence is pretty much universal, and Sittenfeld does a wonderful job of capturing it.
Lee finds the experience to be more than she bargained for. The teenagers at Ault are rich and sophisticated. As a scholarship student, Lee feels like an outsider. Furthermore, good grades don't come as easily to her at Ault as they did when she was in junior high in South Bend. Still, she never seems to seriously consider going home (I think I would have lasted about a week). She stays for her entire four years of high school.
It's unclear to me whether Lee was better off for the experience or not. It seems to me that the experiences of adolescence--massive insecurity, the intensity of her relationships, peer and academic pressure--are greatly amplified by her boarding school experience. I can so clearly remember thinking many of her thoughts when I was in high school, but being so far from home and among students of a different social class would have to make things so much harder. Plus, it didn't get her into a more prestigious college, and even if it had, I'm not sure it would have been worth it. As the character herself points out, you have your whole life to leave your parents.
I loved this book; as I mentioned, I can remember thinking many of Lee's same thoughts and thus really identified with her, though I never went to boarding school (actually, I entertained thoughts of boarding school for about a week in eighth grade; my parents correctly figured that it was just a phase and waited for it to pass). But the painful experience of adolesence is pretty much universal, and Sittenfeld does a wonderful job of capturing it.
Friday, December 23, 2005
Book Review--Twins, by Marcy Dermansky
Talk about a dysfunctional family. Neglectful, workaholic parents. Twin daughters, one of whom thinks she owns the other and acts like a jealous lover whenever the other makes a friend, and their older brother, who gives them a book on twin experiments conducted in Nazi Germany for their 13th birthday. The story is told from the point of view of the twins, in alternating first-person accounts. Sue, the jealous twin, truly scared me for quite awhile with her jealousy and violent tendencies. And I felt sorry for Chloe, who wanted friends and boyfriends and basically a normal adolescence, which was essentially denied her by Sue. Their largely absentee parents were no help at all. When they were present, they tended to use a tape recorder and note pad when talking to their kids, basically acting as though they were clients in their law firm.
Both girls had trouble with eating disorders, and Sue abused pills. Their choices for friends and lovers usually were not terribly wise. Their brother, Dan, took an interest in Sue and was somewhat of a source of support for her, but he didn't really know how to help her either. The books spans the ages of 13 to 18 for the girls, and their parents basically give up when they are 16 or 17. Sue runs away from home to stay with an ex-girlfriend of her brother's, and the parents pull back completely and give Dan money to give to her. They also pretty much abandon Chloe, leaving her to live in their house all alone while they spend their time in a Manhattan apartment (after which Chloe immediately chooses inappropriate housemates). Giving money is no problem, but forget about guidance and emotional support. They just amazed me with their incompetence. The twins struggle to find heir way, which only happens when they can forge their own separate identities.
The book is amazingly good. It pulls the reader in from the very beginning. This is Dermansky's first novel, and I hope to see many more from her.
Both girls had trouble with eating disorders, and Sue abused pills. Their choices for friends and lovers usually were not terribly wise. Their brother, Dan, took an interest in Sue and was somewhat of a source of support for her, but he didn't really know how to help her either. The books spans the ages of 13 to 18 for the girls, and their parents basically give up when they are 16 or 17. Sue runs away from home to stay with an ex-girlfriend of her brother's, and the parents pull back completely and give Dan money to give to her. They also pretty much abandon Chloe, leaving her to live in their house all alone while they spend their time in a Manhattan apartment (after which Chloe immediately chooses inappropriate housemates). Giving money is no problem, but forget about guidance and emotional support. They just amazed me with their incompetence. The twins struggle to find heir way, which only happens when they can forge their own separate identities.
The book is amazingly good. It pulls the reader in from the very beginning. This is Dermansky's first novel, and I hope to see many more from her.
Sunday, December 18, 2005
Movie Review--The Family Stone
I expected to like this movie more than I did. I also expected it to be funnier. While it did have some very funny moments, in general, I would consider it more drama than comedy. Sarah Jessica Parker plays the part of Meredith, an uptight, conservative woman who comes to spend the Christmas holidays with her soon-to-be-fiance, Everett Stone (Dermot Mulroney) and his family. His family doesn't like her at all at first, and they are quite mean to her. Mean enough, in fact, that I had trouble reconciling the fact that they were supposed to be easy-going liberal sorts with how horribly they treated her. It is true that Meredith made an ass of herself at times. Her comments one night at dinner indicating that Everett's gay brother and his partner shouldn't adopt a child because becoming gay might be partly due to environment stand out most starkly to me. But, they'd already treated her pretty badly before that and never really gave her a chance or tried to help her feel more comfortable.
Meredith feels so uncomfortable that she invites her sister, Julie (Claire Danes) to spend the holidays with them. This is when things get really interesting. Everett had never met Julie before that and finds himself drawn to her. Meanwhile, his older brother Ben (Luke Wilson) tries to befriend Meredith.
Anyway, like I said, more drama than comedy. It would have been better the other way around. I'm not sure it was necessary to have the mother be terminally ill, either. I don't really think it made the story better, though it sure made it sadder. The movie does have its moments, though, as well as an impressive cast.
Meredith feels so uncomfortable that she invites her sister, Julie (Claire Danes) to spend the holidays with them. This is when things get really interesting. Everett had never met Julie before that and finds himself drawn to her. Meanwhile, his older brother Ben (Luke Wilson) tries to befriend Meredith.
Anyway, like I said, more drama than comedy. It would have been better the other way around. I'm not sure it was necessary to have the mother be terminally ill, either. I don't really think it made the story better, though it sure made it sadder. The movie does have its moments, though, as well as an impressive cast.
Friday, December 16, 2005
Book Review--What to Keep, by Rachel Cline
This book examines the life of protagonist Denny Roman at three different stages--ages 12, 26, and 36. The daughter of two divorced, remote neuroscientists, Denny is facing adolescence without a whole lot of guidance from them. Her parents are very busy with their careers, and several years previously, they hired Maureen to manage many of the details of their lives. Maureen is a 35-year-old agoraphobic who serves as a sort of surrogate parent to Denny. Besides her busy career, Denny's mother, Lily, is coping (poorly) with her 41st birthday and an unintended pregnancy.
At 26, Denny is an actress, wondering if her career is ever going to take off. She now has a stepfather named Phil. Phil and her mother are moving to New York, and Denny has two days to decide which of her childhood possessions to keep. Oh, and she and her stepfather kiss, on the lips.
At 36, Denny is a playwright living in New York, near her mother again. She is grieving the loss of Maureen, who died at age 59 from a stroke. Maureen's son, Luke, aged 13, shows up on her doorstep one day. Maureen had been a single parent, and when she died, Luke was sent to live with his grandmother in Phoenix. Feeling uncomfortable there, Luke saves his money and runs away to see Denny in New York, hoping he might find a place with her there.
I actually thought the most interesting character was Maureen. The book does get into what led up to her agoraphobia, and how she pulls herself out of it for Denny's sake. Despite having a debilitating anxiety disorder, she came across as the sane one of Denny's parents.
This is Cline's first novel, and pretty good, in my opinion. I look forward to seeing more from her.
At 26, Denny is an actress, wondering if her career is ever going to take off. She now has a stepfather named Phil. Phil and her mother are moving to New York, and Denny has two days to decide which of her childhood possessions to keep. Oh, and she and her stepfather kiss, on the lips.
At 36, Denny is a playwright living in New York, near her mother again. She is grieving the loss of Maureen, who died at age 59 from a stroke. Maureen's son, Luke, aged 13, shows up on her doorstep one day. Maureen had been a single parent, and when she died, Luke was sent to live with his grandmother in Phoenix. Feeling uncomfortable there, Luke saves his money and runs away to see Denny in New York, hoping he might find a place with her there.
I actually thought the most interesting character was Maureen. The book does get into what led up to her agoraphobia, and how she pulls herself out of it for Denny's sake. Despite having a debilitating anxiety disorder, she came across as the sane one of Denny's parents.
This is Cline's first novel, and pretty good, in my opinion. I look forward to seeing more from her.
Friday, December 09, 2005
Book Review--Devil's Corner, by Lisa Scottoline
This book begins with the protagonist, Vicki, an Assistant US Attorney, staring down the barrel of a gun. She had been going to visit a confidential informant on what she believed to be a minor case, that of a woman who had bought two guns at a gun shop and illegally resold them. But things turned really ugly really quickly. Vicki and her partner, Morty, a dedicated Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF) agent, arrive upon the scene of a burglary in progress. Vicki narrowly escapes being shot to death, but Morty and the confidential informant aren't so lucky. Devastated, Vicki seeks justice for her murdered partner. Her search and her grief lead her into some problematic behavior, and she is suspended at work. She does have an ally at work, a fellow AUSA named Dan who agrees with her that Morty's killing was not simply a matter of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Vicki is crazy about Dan, but unfortunately he's married. Furthermore, her search for Morty's killer becomes too dangerous for her to want to let Dan know what she's really doing. She teams up with an unlikely ally who helps her explore a dangerous drug underworld.
This is a great book for anyone who loves legal thrillers, as I do.
This is a great book for anyone who loves legal thrillers, as I do.
Monday, December 05, 2005
Movie Review--Just Friends
Lots and lots of physical comedy in this movie, but it was very funny. Ryan Reynolds stars in the role of Chris. In high school he was an overweight "loser" who was in love with Jamie (Amy Smart), a beautiful cheerleader. When he finally gets up the nerve to confess his feelings to her, she tells him she just wants to be friends.
Ten years later, Chris has transformed himself. He has lost weight and become a successful music executive in LA. Circumstances bring him back home to New Jersey (with an extremely self-absorbed musician, Samantha, in tow), and he encounters his high-school crush for the first time in ten years. So again he tries to win her over, and again it's not easy. Many obstacles present themselves. Samantha is anxious to get to Paris, and Chris keeps trying to distract her with the help of his younger brother, who is only too happy to spend time with the gorgeous Samantha. Chris also has competition, another would-be suitor from high school who has recently moved back to town. His rival, Dusty, is a paramedic who encounters Jamie and Chris when Chris injures himself playing ice hockey (he had wanted to show Jamie just how much his ice skating had improved, but it didn't quite work out like he had hoped). So Chris is in the ambulance with Dusty on one side and Jamie on the other, barely able to move or speak, while Dusty and Jamie are exchanging phone numbers. Talk about frustrating.
So like I said, there was lots of physical comedy, of which the injury on the ice is one example. Chris is generally a clutz, and then there are the regular pummelings he and his brother give each other. I don't always like physical comedy, but Reynolds makes it work. The movie isn't terribly deep, but funny enough to make up for that.
Ten years later, Chris has transformed himself. He has lost weight and become a successful music executive in LA. Circumstances bring him back home to New Jersey (with an extremely self-absorbed musician, Samantha, in tow), and he encounters his high-school crush for the first time in ten years. So again he tries to win her over, and again it's not easy. Many obstacles present themselves. Samantha is anxious to get to Paris, and Chris keeps trying to distract her with the help of his younger brother, who is only too happy to spend time with the gorgeous Samantha. Chris also has competition, another would-be suitor from high school who has recently moved back to town. His rival, Dusty, is a paramedic who encounters Jamie and Chris when Chris injures himself playing ice hockey (he had wanted to show Jamie just how much his ice skating had improved, but it didn't quite work out like he had hoped). So Chris is in the ambulance with Dusty on one side and Jamie on the other, barely able to move or speak, while Dusty and Jamie are exchanging phone numbers. Talk about frustrating.
So like I said, there was lots of physical comedy, of which the injury on the ice is one example. Chris is generally a clutz, and then there are the regular pummelings he and his brother give each other. I don't always like physical comedy, but Reynolds makes it work. The movie isn't terribly deep, but funny enough to make up for that.
Tuesday, November 29, 2005
Book Review--Harvesting the Heart, by Jodi Picoult
This book, as Picoult's generally do, alternates between different points of view and periods in time. In this case, the story is told by Paige (in the first person) and from her husband, Nicholas's point of view, but in the third person. Since Paige's parts are told in the first person and Nicholas's in the third, I personally felt a lot closer to Paige's character. I also didn't like Nicholas particularly, and I'll get to why in just a minute.
Paige has some significant demons in her past to overcome. When she was five, her mother disappeared. An only child, she was raised by her father. When she was 18, she had an abortion. This led to a breakup with her boyfriend, and, worried that her father might somehow discover her secret, she chose to run away instead of waiting just a few months until leaving for college. I had a really hard time understanding that. She had been accepted by the Rhode Island School of Design and wanted to study art. Her interest didn't seem to have really waned, and I didn't think she was even having doubts about college. So, she'd had the abortion because she wasn't ready to handle motherhood and wanted to go to college, but then she didn't end up going to college anyway. She ran away to Massachusetts (from Chicago) and got a job in a seedy diner, where she worked as a waitress but also drew pictures of the customers. She was very good at drawing, and also had a uncanny ability to include things about the person in the drawing that she had no real way of knowing, as if drawing a person gave her a glimpse into their subconscious.
Paige met Nicholas at the diner. His life had been one of privilege. He and Paige hadn't known each other very long at all when he asked her to marry him. They got married and several years later had a kid, which was basically when Paige's life fell apart. She quickly became overwhelmed with the demands of motherhood, and Nicholas wasn't at all understanding. He didn't really help at all. In fairness, he worked very long hours as a heart surgeon, so he didn't have a whole lot of time to help, but his lack of understanding was basically why I didn't like him. He didn't understand that while he got few breaks, Paige got NO break, since mothering is a 24/7 job. He would play with the baby a little bit (maybe) and think it was easy and why was Paige bitching so much?
The other reason I didn't like him was that he would do things like insist she entertain a bunch of snobby people and say he was doing it for her, which was bullshit. He was doing it for himself, to further his own career, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but I thought he should at least be honest about it. If he were really doing it just for her, he would have quit, since she didn't want to do it and would rather have had more of his time. She was not materialistic or hung up with status.
Anyway, Paige eventually couldn't take it anymore and ran off. I think post-partum depression was likely a major factor. She searches for her mother and tries to deal with her past. She does find her mother and spends some time with her. In the process learns more about herself and her own motives. In the meantime, Nicholas learns that it's not so easy trying to raise an infant. He ends up asking his estranged parents for help. Paige eventually returns, but Nicholas, understandably angry at her for leaving, isn't particularly inclined to forgive her. Even though anyone would be mad about that, I thought he was particularly unforgiving, but maybe that's just because I didn't like him in the first place. Interestingly, his parents are more understanding, especially his mother. His mother, while she had not left her family, had had her own rather difficult quest for her own identity, so she could empathize with Paige more than Nicholas could.
Don't get me wrong; I don't really think it was right for Paige to just leave her baby like that. I don't understand how she could. But I guess I really believe that she just couldn't take it anymore and didn't see another way out. She even believed that she was a bad mother and that her baby would be better off without her. It wasn't true, of course, but I do think she really believed that.
It's fair to say that the book is really gripping. It brought out strong emotions in me--anger toward Nicholas, for example, and identification with Paige. I am not sure why I identified with her since my life isn't like hers (I'm single with no kids), but I suppose I can relate to sometimes feeling overwhelmed by life. And the search for one's own identity is pretty much a universal theme.
Paige has some significant demons in her past to overcome. When she was five, her mother disappeared. An only child, she was raised by her father. When she was 18, she had an abortion. This led to a breakup with her boyfriend, and, worried that her father might somehow discover her secret, she chose to run away instead of waiting just a few months until leaving for college. I had a really hard time understanding that. She had been accepted by the Rhode Island School of Design and wanted to study art. Her interest didn't seem to have really waned, and I didn't think she was even having doubts about college. So, she'd had the abortion because she wasn't ready to handle motherhood and wanted to go to college, but then she didn't end up going to college anyway. She ran away to Massachusetts (from Chicago) and got a job in a seedy diner, where she worked as a waitress but also drew pictures of the customers. She was very good at drawing, and also had a uncanny ability to include things about the person in the drawing that she had no real way of knowing, as if drawing a person gave her a glimpse into their subconscious.
Paige met Nicholas at the diner. His life had been one of privilege. He and Paige hadn't known each other very long at all when he asked her to marry him. They got married and several years later had a kid, which was basically when Paige's life fell apart. She quickly became overwhelmed with the demands of motherhood, and Nicholas wasn't at all understanding. He didn't really help at all. In fairness, he worked very long hours as a heart surgeon, so he didn't have a whole lot of time to help, but his lack of understanding was basically why I didn't like him. He didn't understand that while he got few breaks, Paige got NO break, since mothering is a 24/7 job. He would play with the baby a little bit (maybe) and think it was easy and why was Paige bitching so much?
The other reason I didn't like him was that he would do things like insist she entertain a bunch of snobby people and say he was doing it for her, which was bullshit. He was doing it for himself, to further his own career, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, but I thought he should at least be honest about it. If he were really doing it just for her, he would have quit, since she didn't want to do it and would rather have had more of his time. She was not materialistic or hung up with status.
Anyway, Paige eventually couldn't take it anymore and ran off. I think post-partum depression was likely a major factor. She searches for her mother and tries to deal with her past. She does find her mother and spends some time with her. In the process learns more about herself and her own motives. In the meantime, Nicholas learns that it's not so easy trying to raise an infant. He ends up asking his estranged parents for help. Paige eventually returns, but Nicholas, understandably angry at her for leaving, isn't particularly inclined to forgive her. Even though anyone would be mad about that, I thought he was particularly unforgiving, but maybe that's just because I didn't like him in the first place. Interestingly, his parents are more understanding, especially his mother. His mother, while she had not left her family, had had her own rather difficult quest for her own identity, so she could empathize with Paige more than Nicholas could.
Don't get me wrong; I don't really think it was right for Paige to just leave her baby like that. I don't understand how she could. But I guess I really believe that she just couldn't take it anymore and didn't see another way out. She even believed that she was a bad mother and that her baby would be better off without her. It wasn't true, of course, but I do think she really believed that.
It's fair to say that the book is really gripping. It brought out strong emotions in me--anger toward Nicholas, for example, and identification with Paige. I am not sure why I identified with her since my life isn't like hers (I'm single with no kids), but I suppose I can relate to sometimes feeling overwhelmed by life. And the search for one's own identity is pretty much a universal theme.
Monday, November 28, 2005
Movie Review--Walk the Line
This was an awesome movie. Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon were great as Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. I'm not really a Johnny Cash fan, so I hadn't read his autobiography and didn't know anything of his life story. However, one doesn't have to be a Johnny Cash fan to enjoy this movie. The movie begins with a turning point in Cash's life. When they were kids in Arkansas, an accident killed Cash's older brother. Cash's father never really forgave him for being the surviving son. From here, the story jumps ahead several years. After serving in the military, Cash marries his first wife and works briefly as a door-to-door salesman. His desire of course is to be a singer, and he forms a band. He manages to get them an audition, which doesn't go too well when they perform one of their gospel tunes. Things turn around when they perform a song that Cash wrote, and they get a record deal. From there they climb the charts.
His first wife isn't terribly supportive; in fact I read somewhere that one of Cash's daughters was not at all happy with how her mother was portrayed in this movie. It is true that she was angry at him, at first for being more interested in his music than in earning money as a door-to-door salesman, and then because she knew of his attraction to June Carter. But I felt that her anger was justified; I didn't think she was portrayed as being excessively bitchy or anything like that. Upon hearing the gospel tunes that Cash and his band were working on at first, I might have found it difficult to keep the faith as well in the beginning, and obviously he was in love with June Carter, so that was a threat to her.
Cash met June Carter, who along with her singing family had been famous since she was a child, while touring. Both were married to other people at the time, and it is awhile before they actually get together, years in fact. During this time, Carter goes through a bitter divorce, Cash's first wife finally leaves him, Carter briefly marries again, and Cash loses several years to pills and alcohol. But when they do get together, it is forever.
The actors actually sang rather than lip-synched; interestingly, those cast in the lead roles were not singers. The music was very good, though. Both Phoenix and Witherspoon were impressive in their roles, but Reese Witherspoon was especially good in the role of June Carter.
His first wife isn't terribly supportive; in fact I read somewhere that one of Cash's daughters was not at all happy with how her mother was portrayed in this movie. It is true that she was angry at him, at first for being more interested in his music than in earning money as a door-to-door salesman, and then because she knew of his attraction to June Carter. But I felt that her anger was justified; I didn't think she was portrayed as being excessively bitchy or anything like that. Upon hearing the gospel tunes that Cash and his band were working on at first, I might have found it difficult to keep the faith as well in the beginning, and obviously he was in love with June Carter, so that was a threat to her.
Cash met June Carter, who along with her singing family had been famous since she was a child, while touring. Both were married to other people at the time, and it is awhile before they actually get together, years in fact. During this time, Carter goes through a bitter divorce, Cash's first wife finally leaves him, Carter briefly marries again, and Cash loses several years to pills and alcohol. But when they do get together, it is forever.
The actors actually sang rather than lip-synched; interestingly, those cast in the lead roles were not singers. The music was very good, though. Both Phoenix and Witherspoon were impressive in their roles, but Reese Witherspoon was especially good in the role of June Carter.
Wednesday, November 23, 2005
Happy Thanksgiving
I just want to wish everyone who reads this a happy Thanksgiving! If you're traveling, have a safe trip, and I wish everyone good times with family and/or friends.
Monday, November 21, 2005
Book Review--White Lies, Anna Salter
This is the third book in Salter's series featuring forensic psychologist Michael Stone, and probably my favorite.
Reginald Larsen is a noted anthesiologist who may have just made an important discovery regarding adverse reactions to anesthetics. He has been suspended from his hospital pending an investigation of claims of sexual impropriety. He is confident that he can fight the charges against him and wants Michael to do an evaluation as soon as possible. Michael has dealt with the lies of too many sexual offenders to be so sure of his ability to fight the charges.
While Michael is dealing with the Larsen case, a fellow psychologist, Marv, consults with Michael about a case of his where his client has recovered memories (unaided by him) of sexual abuse by her father. She wants to confront her father in a therapy session, which Michael is sure is a very bad idea, since it's unclear if the memories are real and the client has had mush time to work through this in any case. She tries to discourage Marv from allowing this to happen, but Marv says that his client is going to confront her father with or without Marv's help, and Marv feels that he needs to be there for his client. So Michael gets permission from all parties for her to observe behind a one-way mirror, so that at least she can be a witness for Marv if the family sues.
Michael's involvement in these two volatile cases proves to be quite dangerous. Michael has to protect not only herself, but those around her. Michael is brave to the point of being a little crazy, but maybe you'd have to be in her line of work.
Reginald Larsen is a noted anthesiologist who may have just made an important discovery regarding adverse reactions to anesthetics. He has been suspended from his hospital pending an investigation of claims of sexual impropriety. He is confident that he can fight the charges against him and wants Michael to do an evaluation as soon as possible. Michael has dealt with the lies of too many sexual offenders to be so sure of his ability to fight the charges.
While Michael is dealing with the Larsen case, a fellow psychologist, Marv, consults with Michael about a case of his where his client has recovered memories (unaided by him) of sexual abuse by her father. She wants to confront her father in a therapy session, which Michael is sure is a very bad idea, since it's unclear if the memories are real and the client has had mush time to work through this in any case. She tries to discourage Marv from allowing this to happen, but Marv says that his client is going to confront her father with or without Marv's help, and Marv feels that he needs to be there for his client. So Michael gets permission from all parties for her to observe behind a one-way mirror, so that at least she can be a witness for Marv if the family sues.
Michael's involvement in these two volatile cases proves to be quite dangerous. Michael has to protect not only herself, but those around her. Michael is brave to the point of being a little crazy, but maybe you'd have to be in her line of work.
Sunday, November 20, 2005
Book Review--Fault Lines, by Anna Salter
In this second book featuring forensic psychologist Michael Stone, Michael's worst fears have come true. Alex B. Willy, sadistic child molester, has been released from prison. When Willy was still incarcerated, Michael had visited him to gain insights on child molesters. The insights were valuable, since much of Michael's work involves working with child molesters and victims. However, the information Willy provided may have come at far too high a price. When Willy and Michael had talked, neither had thought he'd ever get out of prison. He was in his early 60s and starting a 30-year sentence. He had spoken freely of how pedophiles operate and even boasted of his crimes on audiotape. Now he has been released on a technicality, and Michael is in possession of lots and lots of information Willy would rather she didn't have. Worse, Willy doesn't have anything resembling a conscience, and Michael shudders to think of the plans he might have for her.
Her friends--Adam, a police chief and Michael's sometime lover, and Carlotta, a lawyer, want her to hide, but Michael is too stubborn for that. So she keeps seeing therapy clients and gets a disturbing email from Willy suggesting that he knows who her clients are and what they are saying during their sessions. She has a friend, a former FBI agent, who educates her about bugs and gives her a bug detector, but it doesn't seem to help. Willy is always two steps ahead of her in a game she has to win. Her life depends on it.
Anna Salter's books are always gripping and hard to put down. She is herself a forensic psychologist and the cases portrayed in the books are chillingly realistic.
Her friends--Adam, a police chief and Michael's sometime lover, and Carlotta, a lawyer, want her to hide, but Michael is too stubborn for that. So she keeps seeing therapy clients and gets a disturbing email from Willy suggesting that he knows who her clients are and what they are saying during their sessions. She has a friend, a former FBI agent, who educates her about bugs and gives her a bug detector, but it doesn't seem to help. Willy is always two steps ahead of her in a game she has to win. Her life depends on it.
Anna Salter's books are always gripping and hard to put down. She is herself a forensic psychologist and the cases portrayed in the books are chillingly realistic.
Saturday, November 19, 2005
New Link for Cat Lovers
I just added a new link to my list of links: Sir Ryder of Cupp. It's a must read for any cat lover--lots of cute cat pictures, a long, distressing step by step account of giving a cat a pill (hilarious if you're not the one doing it), that type of thing. I can definitely relate to the pill thing. When I first got my cat Moonie from a shelter, she had lots of health problems. I had to give her lots of pills, and though we had had pets while I was growing up, I certainly hadn't had to do that kind of thing before and wasn't in fact known for having a great love of or skill with animals. It took awhile but now I am a pro at giving pills to cats.
Anyway, I love cat blogs, so when I saw this, I knew I had to add this link.
Anyway, I love cat blogs, so when I saw this, I knew I had to add this link.
Movie Review-Prime
The first thing I am wondering is unrelated to the movie itself. Why is it that movie theaters are never a comfortable temperature? The movie theater in which I saw Prime was freezing. I had my winter coat on the whole entire time. It was like they had the air conditioning on or something.
Comfort aside, I did enjoy this movie. It was absolutely hilarious. Uma Thurman plays Rafi, a woman in her mid-30s who has just gone through a divorce and is seeing a therapist, Lisa (Meryl Streep). Rafi meets a great new guy, David (Bryan Greenberg) and they hit it off right away. Rafi is ecstatic in her new relationship, but at the same time a little unsure if he's the right person, as he is quite a bit younger than she is. Lisa encourages her to go for it and enjoy herself.
Neither therapist nor patient realize right away that Rafi is dating Lisa's son. I loved the moment of dawning horror when Lisa realized whom Rafi had been talking about (in intimate detail) in all those therapy sessions. It was far more than a mother would want to know about her son's sex life; that's for sure. And Lisa is far different as a parent than a therapist. Where she had encouraged Rafi to go for it and not worry about whether the relationship was going to go anywhere, she had strongly encouraged her son not to start something with someone who wasn't Jewish and was older than he (she didn't know at first that it was Rafi he was talking about).
Lisa goes to her own therapist and asks for advice on how to handle the situation. In my opinion, she gets some bad advice, although if she'd gotten better advice the movie wouldn't have been as good, I guess. Lisa's therapist said that if she thought this was just going to be a fling, then she wouldn't be serving her client's best interest by terminating therapy with her. The reason I thought this was bad advice was that it would only work if Lisa was right about it turning out to be a brief fling, and she had no way of knowing whether or not it would be. Hoping it would be a fling wasn't the same thing. And the longer the relationship continued, the harder it would be to tell Rafi that she needed to find another therapist and why. But anyway, Lisa follows the bad advice and ends up hearing more and more details that she really doesn't want to know.
Meryl Streep is great as the therapist and mother to David. Rafi and David are a great couple and the viewer really hopes they will be able to work things out. The movie did drag a little in spots, but mostly it was funny.
Comfort aside, I did enjoy this movie. It was absolutely hilarious. Uma Thurman plays Rafi, a woman in her mid-30s who has just gone through a divorce and is seeing a therapist, Lisa (Meryl Streep). Rafi meets a great new guy, David (Bryan Greenberg) and they hit it off right away. Rafi is ecstatic in her new relationship, but at the same time a little unsure if he's the right person, as he is quite a bit younger than she is. Lisa encourages her to go for it and enjoy herself.
Neither therapist nor patient realize right away that Rafi is dating Lisa's son. I loved the moment of dawning horror when Lisa realized whom Rafi had been talking about (in intimate detail) in all those therapy sessions. It was far more than a mother would want to know about her son's sex life; that's for sure. And Lisa is far different as a parent than a therapist. Where she had encouraged Rafi to go for it and not worry about whether the relationship was going to go anywhere, she had strongly encouraged her son not to start something with someone who wasn't Jewish and was older than he (she didn't know at first that it was Rafi he was talking about).
Lisa goes to her own therapist and asks for advice on how to handle the situation. In my opinion, she gets some bad advice, although if she'd gotten better advice the movie wouldn't have been as good, I guess. Lisa's therapist said that if she thought this was just going to be a fling, then she wouldn't be serving her client's best interest by terminating therapy with her. The reason I thought this was bad advice was that it would only work if Lisa was right about it turning out to be a brief fling, and she had no way of knowing whether or not it would be. Hoping it would be a fling wasn't the same thing. And the longer the relationship continued, the harder it would be to tell Rafi that she needed to find another therapist and why. But anyway, Lisa follows the bad advice and ends up hearing more and more details that she really doesn't want to know.
Meryl Streep is great as the therapist and mother to David. Rafi and David are a great couple and the viewer really hopes they will be able to work things out. The movie did drag a little in spots, but mostly it was funny.
Friday, November 18, 2005
Book Review--Shiny Water, by Anna Salter
Anna's Salter's books are rather addictive to me. They just really sweep you along. Shiny Water is the first in a series featuring Dr. Michael Stone, a forensic psychologist (female, despite the man's name). I've actually read all of her books before, but I enjoy rereading them.
This book is about a nasty custody case. Michael is asked to testify because one of the children, aged six, told a teacher that his father was sexually abusing him and his younger sister. The children confirm this in Michael's office. Oddly, though their mother thinks her soon-to-be-ex is a horrible person, she does not believe that the children were sexually abused. She has some problems with paranoia (big problems, actually), and thinks that their father coached the children to say this, that the court would decide it wasn't true, blame the mother for encouraging her children to make up stories about their father, and award custody to the father. Michael is very experienced in sexual abuse cases and believes that the children really were molested, and says as much in court. However, the mother's fears about what the judge would think about the charges of sexual abuse turned out to be accurate, and Michael's testimony was ignored. The father was given full custody, the mother limited visitation.
But then the children are found murdered in their beds when visiting their mother, who is arrested for the crime. Though she knows that the children's mother has mental health problems, she doesn't believe for a second that she murdered her children. She embarks on her own personal quest to find the real killer. It is a quest that may threaten her life, as the killer is much closer than she expected, and someone she never suspected.
Anyway, this book wouldn't appeal to some people, since the subject matter is pretty upsetting. But I love Michael's determination to do what she can to right a wrong. Obviously whatever she does won't bring the children back to life, but she can at least help bring their real killer to justice, even if it's at great cost to herself.
This book is about a nasty custody case. Michael is asked to testify because one of the children, aged six, told a teacher that his father was sexually abusing him and his younger sister. The children confirm this in Michael's office. Oddly, though their mother thinks her soon-to-be-ex is a horrible person, she does not believe that the children were sexually abused. She has some problems with paranoia (big problems, actually), and thinks that their father coached the children to say this, that the court would decide it wasn't true, blame the mother for encouraging her children to make up stories about their father, and award custody to the father. Michael is very experienced in sexual abuse cases and believes that the children really were molested, and says as much in court. However, the mother's fears about what the judge would think about the charges of sexual abuse turned out to be accurate, and Michael's testimony was ignored. The father was given full custody, the mother limited visitation.
But then the children are found murdered in their beds when visiting their mother, who is arrested for the crime. Though she knows that the children's mother has mental health problems, she doesn't believe for a second that she murdered her children. She embarks on her own personal quest to find the real killer. It is a quest that may threaten her life, as the killer is much closer than she expected, and someone she never suspected.
Anyway, this book wouldn't appeal to some people, since the subject matter is pretty upsetting. But I love Michael's determination to do what she can to right a wrong. Obviously whatever she does won't bring the children back to life, but she can at least help bring their real killer to justice, even if it's at great cost to herself.
Thursday, November 17, 2005
Book Review--Dating is Murder, by Harley Jane Kozak
This is the second book in the series featuring Wollie Shelley, greeting card designer and amateur sleuth. Wollie is also a contestant on a cheesy reality show called Biological Clock, featuring three women in their 30s and three men. Each of the three women has on-camera dates with each of three men, and then the audience votes on which combination should produce a child (with or without romantic involvement). Like I said, cheesy. Wollie is more or less participating for the $500 per week, for only two nights worth of work.
Her main concern is her missing friend Annika, a college exchange student from Germany who is also Wollie's math tutor. Wollie becomes concerned when Annika misses a tutoring session and then Annika's mother calls from Germany, saying that she hadn't heard from Annika for awhile, that her host family wouldn't return her calls, and that she was sure something was wrong.
Annika frequently hangs out on the Biological Clock set, so Wollie asks others on the set if Annika had said anything recently that might shed light on her disappearance. Disturbingly, she finds out that Annika had wanted to know how she could get a gun. Upon visiting Annika's host family, Wollie learns that Annika may have been involved with drugs. Both pieces of information are shocking to Wollie; Annika had hardly seemed like the type of person to want a gun or be involved with drugs.
Reporting Annika's disappearance to the police doesn't really do much good, and in investigating on her own, Wollie finds herself being followed. Actually, she is being followed by more than one person, some of whom have to do with the television show and trying to fix the results. You might say that Wollie's life has become rather scary on several levels.
This book was a lot better than the first book in the series, as I mentioned in my last post. Wollie is a very likeable character. Despite her tendency to get involved in some rather ridiculous projects (the TV show in this one and the dating "research" in the first book), she is actually quite intelligent and creative. I actually rather enjoyed the Biological Clock angle just because the show was so bad it was funny. Anyway, I imagine that there will be another book about Wollie, and I will most likely read it.
Her main concern is her missing friend Annika, a college exchange student from Germany who is also Wollie's math tutor. Wollie becomes concerned when Annika misses a tutoring session and then Annika's mother calls from Germany, saying that she hadn't heard from Annika for awhile, that her host family wouldn't return her calls, and that she was sure something was wrong.
Annika frequently hangs out on the Biological Clock set, so Wollie asks others on the set if Annika had said anything recently that might shed light on her disappearance. Disturbingly, she finds out that Annika had wanted to know how she could get a gun. Upon visiting Annika's host family, Wollie learns that Annika may have been involved with drugs. Both pieces of information are shocking to Wollie; Annika had hardly seemed like the type of person to want a gun or be involved with drugs.
Reporting Annika's disappearance to the police doesn't really do much good, and in investigating on her own, Wollie finds herself being followed. Actually, she is being followed by more than one person, some of whom have to do with the television show and trying to fix the results. You might say that Wollie's life has become rather scary on several levels.
This book was a lot better than the first book in the series, as I mentioned in my last post. Wollie is a very likeable character. Despite her tendency to get involved in some rather ridiculous projects (the TV show in this one and the dating "research" in the first book), she is actually quite intelligent and creative. I actually rather enjoyed the Biological Clock angle just because the show was so bad it was funny. Anyway, I imagine that there will be another book about Wollie, and I will most likely read it.
Monday, November 14, 2005
Book Review--Dating Dead Men, by Harley Jane Kozak
This is the first book in a new series starring Wollie (short for Wollstonecraft, if you can believe it) Shelley, a greeting card designer and amateur sleuth. I actually read the second book in the series first, but decided to review them in order. It's a good thing I read the second book first, though, or I probably would not have read on.
In Dating Dead Men, Wollie is concerned about the card shop she manages. If her shop is upgraded she can buy it. The shop also carries some greeting cards she designs, as well as cards from many other sources. Wollie is also involved in a "research" project. A radio talk-show host is writing a book, How to Avoid Getting Dumped all the Time, and Wollie is helping out with the research by dating 40 men in 60 days.
After receiving an urgent call from her brother Wollie is driving to see him at the state mental hospital (he's paranoid schizophrenic) when she stumbles across a dead body. She gets to the hospital and sees that her brother is all right and in fact, fast asleep. So she leaves, but if briefly taken hostage by a "doctor" who is on the run from the mob. Fortunately his only desire was to escape and not to harm Wollie, and by the time they have driven together for a ways, they have become friends of sorts. Wollie is worried that her brother, who somehow knew about the corpse before she came across it, is involved in the crime, so she tries to solve it herself rather than going to the police. This involves encountering some rather sinister types, to say the least. The dead body and "Doc's" run from the mob are connected, and Doc keeps trying to keep Wollie out of harm's way, which doesn't work because she doesn't take his advice.
Anyway, I didn't like this book as much as I liked the second one (which I will review in a later post) because I thought this book was confusing. It was just hard to follow in spots, and I am not sure if this is because of the writing, or if I kept getting lost because it failed to hold my interest. But like I've said, the second book is better, so I do think there is hope for this particular series.
In Dating Dead Men, Wollie is concerned about the card shop she manages. If her shop is upgraded she can buy it. The shop also carries some greeting cards she designs, as well as cards from many other sources. Wollie is also involved in a "research" project. A radio talk-show host is writing a book, How to Avoid Getting Dumped all the Time, and Wollie is helping out with the research by dating 40 men in 60 days.
After receiving an urgent call from her brother Wollie is driving to see him at the state mental hospital (he's paranoid schizophrenic) when she stumbles across a dead body. She gets to the hospital and sees that her brother is all right and in fact, fast asleep. So she leaves, but if briefly taken hostage by a "doctor" who is on the run from the mob. Fortunately his only desire was to escape and not to harm Wollie, and by the time they have driven together for a ways, they have become friends of sorts. Wollie is worried that her brother, who somehow knew about the corpse before she came across it, is involved in the crime, so she tries to solve it herself rather than going to the police. This involves encountering some rather sinister types, to say the least. The dead body and "Doc's" run from the mob are connected, and Doc keeps trying to keep Wollie out of harm's way, which doesn't work because she doesn't take his advice.
Anyway, I didn't like this book as much as I liked the second one (which I will review in a later post) because I thought this book was confusing. It was just hard to follow in spots, and I am not sure if this is because of the writing, or if I kept getting lost because it failed to hold my interest. But like I've said, the second book is better, so I do think there is hope for this particular series.
Sunday, November 13, 2005
Movie Review--Dreamer: Inspired by a True Story
This was just a touching story. It's a tearjerker in spots and a great family movie. Kurt Russell plays a horse trainer, Ben Crane. His daughter, Cale (Dakota Fanning) loves horses. She accompanies her father to work one day when one of his favorite horses, Sonador (Spanish for Dreamer), breaks her leg during a race. The breeder, Ben's boss, wants the animal to be put down immediately, but Cale is there watching, and Ben argues with his boss and manages to save Sonador's life. He also manages to get fired, but he takes Sonador with him. He figures that he can nurse Sonador back to health, and though she'll never race again, he could breed her and sell the colt for a lot of money. And Cale is delighted to have the horse with them, the only horse on what was once a large horse farm. There is only one problem with Ben's plan: the horse is infertile.
Faced with financial ruin, Ben tells his wife that he would have let the vet put Sonador down the day she broke her leg if Cale hadn't been there that day and he'd still have his job. Cale overhears and plans to run away with the horse (a bold plan, to be sure). She gets on the horse, who gets spooked when Ben's truck pulls up. The horse runs out of open gate with Cale, who can't get her to stop. Ben manages to drive up alongside them, gets out of the truck, and gets Cale to jump off of the horse and into his arms. It was then that they realized the horse could run, and run fast. So they start training her to race again.
As one can surmise from the title, this is based on a true story. I read online (on the MSN movie info; the synopsis is by Mark Deming) that it's based on the story of Mariah's Storm, a horse who broke her leg in 1993, but who made an incredible comeback. In 1994 she won the Arlington Heights Oaks, and in 1995 won the Turfway Breeder's Cup.
Faced with financial ruin, Ben tells his wife that he would have let the vet put Sonador down the day she broke her leg if Cale hadn't been there that day and he'd still have his job. Cale overhears and plans to run away with the horse (a bold plan, to be sure). She gets on the horse, who gets spooked when Ben's truck pulls up. The horse runs out of open gate with Cale, who can't get her to stop. Ben manages to drive up alongside them, gets out of the truck, and gets Cale to jump off of the horse and into his arms. It was then that they realized the horse could run, and run fast. So they start training her to race again.
As one can surmise from the title, this is based on a true story. I read online (on the MSN movie info; the synopsis is by Mark Deming) that it's based on the story of Mariah's Storm, a horse who broke her leg in 1993, but who made an incredible comeback. In 1994 she won the Arlington Heights Oaks, and in 1995 won the Turfway Breeder's Cup.
Saturday, November 12, 2005
Another New Link
I have added another new link to my list: The Rubin Review. Check it out, it's really funny.
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