February 2006

Heart of Gold

More of a concert film than a documentary Neil Young: Heart of Gold captures Neil Young giving a two night performance at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium just days before he goes in for surgery.  The music is of course great and the sound quality is excellent but I would have liked more of a behind the scenes look with interviews and reminiscing with Neil and his friends.  All that said fans of good music will want to check it out.

Neil Young: Heart of Gold
3 & 1/2 Stars

Neil Young: Heart of Gold takes a look at Neil Young’s two night performance with friends in Nashville.  Young manages to put on one hell of a show (I don’t think I’ve ever heard a better quality sound on a concert film) and I was smiling ear to ear when he broke into “Old Man.”  I would have preferred a litle more documentary mixed in to the music but what we do get is quite good.  (click the poster to see the trailer)

The film starts with Neil Young’s friends showing up in Nashville and being driven to the Ryman Auditorium.  We get glimpses and short stories from the performers including Ben Keith, Spooner Oldham, Rick Rosas, and Emmylou Harris telling the story of how the performance was put together on their rides to the auditorium.  Also joining in are Karl Himmel, Chad Cromwell, Wayne Jackson, Grant Boatwright, Larry Crag, and Neil’s wife Pegi Young.  Young had just months before learned of his brain aneurysm and at the time of the performance was just days away from going into surgery.  That gives the film added meaning and relevance knowing Young may have believed on some level that this would be his last performance. 

After the short documentary footage (all together probably only ten minutes worth) the movie launches into the concert.  Young performs many songs from his latest album “Prairie Wind” along with mixing in classics such as “Harvest Moon” and “Old Man.”  His performance of “Old Man” is particularly memorable because its one of the few songs he stops to tell a story about where the song came from.  Young also gives a short tale before his performance of “This Old Guitar” talking about the guitar he is using which once was owned by Hank Williams.  Such moments are hidden nuggets between the music and I just wish there were more of them.

Despite his age and the weight of his health problems Young gives a tremendous performance.  I give huge credit for Demme in capturing a legendary performer still at the top of his game on an incredibly emotional night.  Demme’s choices are all the right ones as he manages to capture the feel and emotion of the night as well as the sound.

I’m not a huge fan of concerts or concert films for that matter, but it’s a damn fine deal to get to hear Neil Young for the price of movie ticket in seats better than any you could get at an actual concert.  Still for most people I think it will make a better DVD than movie experience and you can enjoy the music in the background without being stuck in a theater seat for an hour and forty minutes.  If the film had gone for more of a documentary style as the early interviews I would have given it a higher rating as they some of the best parts of the movie.  Still for Neil fans you get what you want just nothing more.

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Why is it Called Firewall?

  • Title: Firewall
  • IMDB: link

firewall-poster
The cast’s (and audience’s) reaction to the script
Firewall is one of those high tech terrorist action films that if you pay even the slightest attention to or know anything about computers you’ll actually laugh at how ridiculous it is.  Not to be outdone however the script is equally poor and the acting, from a group of damn good actors, is substandard.  Not to be outdone however the effects, camera work and movie cues are horrendously awful.  What’s good about Firewall?  Not much.

Jack Stanfield (Harrison Ford) works for a bank, has a loving wife Beth (Virginia Madsen), and two cute kids (Carly Schroeder and Jimmy Bennett).  A group of exceptional thieves kidnap his family and hold them for ransom while Jack is at work.  They take control of the house, readjust the security system and put cameras in all the rooms (yet they forget to unplug the phones, take away the family’s car keys, and decide to leave the family together unwatched except for the cameras that don’t pick up sound so they can plot escape).

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Don’t Call Me Stupid!

  • Title: A Fish Called Wanda
  • IMDb: link

A hitman who quotes Nietzsche and believes the London Underground is a political movement, a stuttering animal lover who keeps accidentally killing small dogs, an English barrister stuck in a loveless marriage, a thief used as a patsy, and a woman named Wanda who wraps each one of them around her little finger to get what she wants.  Rarely are romantic comedies this good.

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Crystal Ironies

Proposal – Men and women can never ever just be friends without the ‘sex thing’ coming into play.  That idea was the focus of Rob Reiner’s 1989 film When Harry Met Sally (yes, the one with the famous faking-your-orgasm scene).  So how true is the proposal and how good is this film in dealing with the issue?

When Harry Met Sally…
N/A

  I’m 45 years old. I have no wife, no kids, and no family- at least I have no family here in Kansas City. They’re all back in L.A., a mere pinpoint in my rear view mirror.  I have one male friend, Tim. He writes for this website. I am, for all intents and purposes, a loner- except for the many female friends I have: Suzy, Jaime, Beth, Ashley, Shauna, Cheryl… They’re all much younger than me. I believe the main reasons why they like hanging out with me are because I spend money on them, I make them laugh and I give them brutally honest insight into the male psyche. I tell them that men- especially men between the ages of 16 and 35- are hard-wired to have sex with multiple partners; that we become bored with our partners after about a year, and this boredom results in resentment because we see our partners as obstacles to all the other women who want to have sex with us.

  In other words, we’re delusional. Delusions of grandeur are what keep us from asking for directions when we’re lost or looking at the printed instructions when we’re assembling a propane grill.  Delusions of Granduer are what brought us out of the caves and onto the high seas… It’s what motivates us to go across a crowded bar and approach a table full of women.  I also tell them about the other truth of relationships that none of us can get around: Men and women can never ever just be friends without the ‘sex thing’ coming into play.

If you’re familiar with that truth, then, like me, you probably heard it crystallized in Rob Reiner and Nora Ephron’s 1989 film “When Harry Met Sally”. Or as the critics called it when it was released, “When Rob Reiner Met Woody Allen”, because of the similarities to “Annie Hall”.

Like “Annie Hall”, anyone who has ever been in a relationship will identify with at least one of the razor sharp observations penned by Nora Ephron and delivered with impeccable timing by The King of Curmudgeon’s , Billy Crystal. While Rob Riener’s direction and the performances of Meg Ryan, Carrie Fisher and Bruno Kirby are first rate, it’s Billy Crystal’s show. Just as he had proved in films like “Running Scared” and “Throw Momma From The Train”, Crystal can generate chemistry from a crash test dummy.

When I saw the film when it premiered, I wondered which lines were written by Ephron and which ones were ad-libbed by Crystal. Now, 17 years later, I don’t care. That’s all just film scholar ‘zanna’. In this day and age, filled with military and corporate euphemisms, and E-Harmony and My Space ‘hook-ups’, it’s refreshing to go back to a film that doesn’t pull any punches when it comes to sex, love and relationships.  “Annie Hall” and “When Harry Met Sally” are the tag-team champs of relationship films.

My marriage lasted for ten years. I could add a few truths and observations to the repertoire: finishing each other’s sentences; fighting over who’s going to tell the story of a shared experience to friends at a party because the other got it all wrong the last time. These are some of the things I tell my young friends they can look forward to in a long term relationship.
I also tell them why my marriage didn’t last. It’s one of the other truths in life: Women expect men to change- and they don’t. And men expect women to stay the same- but they change.  It’s one of the ironies of life.

Which brings me to one of the great moments in the film- the last scene. No character in film has ever- or, for that matter, will ever- say the words “I hate you” with such heartfelt irony as Sally Albright does.

So buy or rent this film, and keep the pillow in the bedroom because you’re girlfriend (or wife) will not fall asleep halfway through it. It’s a great comedy that meets at least one of my criteria for a great film: people quote it.
If you don’t believe me, try not making references to the lines “Don’t f—- with Mr. Zero” or “Baby Fish Mouth” after you’ve seen it.

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Love is Funny Week

Welcome lovers, today begins our week long look at romance.  Over the next few days (along with our regular content) we’ll tell you a few of our favorite romantic comedies, dramas, and hidden gems available on DVD (and maybe a few to stay away from) to get you in the mood for Saint Valentine’s Day.

Love is Funny Week
Custom Rating

Welcome lovers, today begins our week long look at romance.  Over the next few days (along with our regular content) we’ll tell you a few of our favorite romantic comedies, dramas, and hidden gems available on DVD and remind you of a couple still showing in theaters (perhaps also some a few to stay away from) to get you in the mood for Saint Valentine’s Day.

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