by Lani
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
It's award season in Hollywood, which means it's time for TCM's "31 Days of Oscar" programming. Each day in February (and a few in March, too) will feature films which were Academy Award winners or nominees. This year, the films are being shown from A to Z starting with Abe Lincoln in Illinois on February 1 and ending with, well, Z on March 3. The alphabetical order creates some interesting programming blocks of films you might never see on a double feature except during 31 Days of Oscar. I've chosen a few of my favorite groupings this month.
2/1: A is for archetype
8 PM - All About Eve (1950)
10:30 PM - An American in Paris (1951)
12:30 AM - Annie Hall (1977)
What better way to start the month than with the film which holds the record for most Oscar nominations, All About Eve? It's 14 nominations have since been tied by Titanic and this year's awards frontrunner La La Land; however, there were fewer categories in the 50s, so All About Eve's record is even more impressive. The film won 5 awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Costume Design, and Best Supporting Actor for George Sanders. In his autobiography Sanders said of winning an Oscar, "I was grateful and flattered to get mine, but apart from making my already large ego one size larger it did absolutely nothing for me." The film's star, Bette Davis, might disagree. Davis and co-star Anne Baxter were both nominated for Best Actress, the first time two lead actresses had been nominated for the same film; however, the award that year went to Judy Holliday for Born Yesterday. The film is the ultimate backstage story, centering on an established stage actress threatened by an ambitious younger woman with her sights set on stardom. Davis's powerful performance as Broadway star Margo Channing and Baxter's equally good turn as the cunning upstart Eve Harrington, plus the bitingly witty dialog by writer /director Joseph Mankiewicz, make this one of the best of all time.
Though musicals had been popular since silent films became talkies, it was rare for a musical to win best picture. An American in Paris broke the trend garnering 8 nominations and 6 wins, including Best Picture. Gene Kelly stars as an American painter living in Paris who has a complicated romance with a French girl. The charming performances of the cast, particularly Kelly and love interest Leslie Caron, beautiful dances choreographed by Kelly, and the iconic music of the Gershwins, make An American in Paris a true delight. One of the most memorable sequences is the 17-minute "dream ballet" which ends the film. The power of this sequence must have stuck in the minds of the Academy voters because while director Vincente Minelli lost out to the director of A Place in the Sun, George Stevens; Gene Kelly was given an honorary award "in appreciation of his versatility as an actor, singer, director and dancer, and specifically for his brilliant achievements in the art of choreography on film." I would give credit to both Minelli and Kelly for the creative vision which made this film one of the crowning achievements of MGM's golden age.
Annie Hall received 4 Academy Awards for Best Picture, Woody Allen's direction, the screenplay by Allen and Marshall Brickman, and Best Actress for Diane Keaton. The only nominated category it didn't win that year was Best Actor, in which Allen lost to Richard Dreyfuss for his performance in The Goodbye Girl. Comedy is another genre which is not often recognized by Oscar. Annie Hall was the first comedy since 1963's Tom Jones to win Best Picture (beating out Star Wars along the way); and I'm not sure there's been another since then...maybe Shakespeare in Love? The story is a simple one in which boy, comedy writer Alvy, meets girl, aspiring singer Annie, but the two quickly complicate matters with their neuroses and insecurities. With this film, Allen created the blueprint for modern romantic comedy.
2/8: F is for force
12 AM - The French Connection (1971)
2 AM - Friendly Persuasion (1956)
The French Connection was the big winner of 1971, with 8 nominations and 5 wins, including Best Picture. The film, which follows two Brooklyn narcotics detectives tracking a drug kingpin, is memorable for a breathless car chase sequence and Gene Hackman's forceful portrayal of brutish cop Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle. No surprise then that the film picked up Oscars for Best Editing and Best Actor, in addition to awards for its director, William Friedkin, and screenplay by Ernest Tidyman.
Friendly Persuasion proves that you can also make an impact through the rejection of violence, a sentiment echoed by this year's Oscar nominated film Hacksaw Ridge (ironically, an extremely violent film). The story centers on a Quaker family in Indiana whose commitment to peace is tested during the Civil War. The film received 6 nominations for Best Picture, Screenplay, Sound, and Director, as well as for the featured song "Friendly Persuasion (Thee I Love)" and supporting actor Anthony Perkins. Though set against the tumult of the Civil War, this is also a sentimental film about a family kept together by their strength of will and faith. But despite box office popularity, able direction by William Wyler, and strong performances by Gary Cooper and Dorothy McGuire, Friendly Persuasion lost the big prize that year to the star-studded spectacle of Around the World in 80 Days filmed in ultra wide screen Todd-AO.
2/11: H is for hysteria
10 PM - A Hard Day's Night (1964)
11:45 PM - Harvey (1950)
Put together quickly to capitalize on worldwide Beatlemania, A Hard Day's Night is much better than it has any right to be and ending up getting two Academy Award nominations. The filmmakers were secretly worried that the Beatles could be a passing fad; therefore, the film needed to get to theaters quickly. The filming was completed in six weeks and the finished product premiered only three months after filming began! The hilarious, and Oscar-nominated, screenplay by Alun Owen focuses on a day (or so) in the life of the band as they talk to the press, evade hordes of screaming fans, and generally goof around, all in the lead-up to a performance on a television show. The screenplay is further helped by the innate charm of John, Paul, George, and Ringo, as well as a crack supporting cast of British character actors, most notably William Brambell as Paul's crotchety, mischievous grandfather. Of course another big reason to watch the film is the music, including the title song and other hits like "Can't Buy Me Love" and "All My Loving." Producer George Martin received the film's second Oscar nomination for the score. (Note: the category of "musical score - adaptation or treatment" was only around from 1963 to 1968, and most nominees were films which had been adapted from Broadway musicals with existing scores.)
Harvey received two Oscar nominations, Best Actor for star James Stewart and Best Supporting Actress for Josephine Hull (which she won). However, it's a shock to me that the screenplay, adapted for film by Mary Chase and Oscar Brodney from Chase's Pulitzer Prize winning play, was completely overlooked. The concept -- that a small-town eccentric (or drunk, depending on your opinion) is accompanied everywhere by a 6'3" invisible rabbit to the embarrassment and dismay of his family -- is so out there, it takes a masterful touch to make it work. Stewart gives one of his most memorable comedic performances as the gentle iconoclast Elwood P. Dowd, though he lost the Oscar to Jose Ferrer's starring performance in Cyrano de Bergerac. The play had been a hit on Broadway for five years and the filmmakers imported most of the original cast, including Hull as Dowd's increasingly desperate sister. A couple of interesting facts about the film -- though it is implied that Elwood is an alcoholic, due to the film production code he is never shown taking a drink; many of the shots in the film are intentionally wider than they need to be to allow room for the invisible Harvey.
2/19: N is for nominee
6:30 AM - North by Northwest (1959)
9 AM - Now, Voyager (1942)
11 AM - The Nun's Story (1959)
They say it's an honor just to be nominated. Sometimes a really great film can pick up a few nominations, but in the end lose to that year's juggernaut. That's what happened to Alfred Hitchcock's spy thriller North by Northwest, which picked up 3 nominations for Art Direction, Editing, and Screenplay; unfortunately for Hitch, his film was up against Ben-Hur which would set a record that year with 11 wins. (The record still stands, but is shared with Titanic and Lord of the Rings: Return of the King.) The original screenplay award that year would go to the Doris Day-Rock Hudson comedy Pillow Talk. Combining many of Hitchcock's signature elements -- mistaken identity, a glamorous blonde, diabolical villains, and fear of those people and institutions we should trust -- plus favorite leading man Cary Grant, North by Northwest is the quintessential Hitchcock picture. The famous crop duster scene is so well done, it is suspenseful no matter how many times I watch it. However, one of the best parts of the movie didn't even get a nomination: Bernard Hermann's memorable score.
Also coming up empty at the 1959 Oscars was The Nun's Story, directed by Fred Zinnemann and starring Audrey Hepburn. This moving portrait of a nun who must repress her natural independence first as a novice, and later on a mission to Africa, was one of the most popular movies of the year. The strength of the film lies in the star power of Hepburn, and she gives a superb performance as Gaby/Sister Luke; playing against her fashion-plate image, she spends most of the film covered up in a nun's habit. Hepburn was nominated for Best Actress, but lost to Simone Signoret, the polar opposite of a nun as an unfaithful wife in Room at the Top. The film received 8 nominations in all, including Best Picture, Director, Cinematography, Editing, Sound, Score, and Adapted Screenplay. I'll admit that the film might sound dull at first, but The Nun's Story is so well-crafted it will pull you in and keep you captivated.
Now, Voyager is an emotional drama about a plain, put-upon woman who comes into her own through the help of a psychiatrist and her chaste love for a married man. It was Bette Davis's biggest hit of the 1940s and provided many quotable lines, including "Don't ask for the moon, we have the stars." The brilliant Bette Davis was again nominated for Best Actress, but did not win. (Lest you're feeling sorry for her now, she had already won the award twice in the 1930s for her performances in Dangerous and Jezebel.) Gladys Cooper, who played Davis's domineering mother, received a Best Supporting Actress nomination. Both the Best Actress and Supporting Actress Oscar would go to the stars of that year's big winner Mrs. Miniver, Greer Garson and Teresa Wright, respectively. However, Now, Voyager did manage one win for the elegant score by Max Steiner.
2/22: R is for romance
8 PM - Roman Holiday (1953)
10:15 PM - A Room with a View (1986)
Roman Holiday is an effervescent romp through the streets of Rome which made Audrey Hepburn a star. She plays a princess on an official tour of Europe, who runs away from her duties and has an adventure with an American reporter (played by Gregory Peck). The film received 10 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture, Director, Cinematography, Editing, Art Direction, Screenplay, and Supporting Actor for Eddie Albert. It won in three categories: Best Actress, Costumes, and Motion Picture Story. It is interesting to note that, at the time, "motion picture story" was a separate category from screenplay; so, Dalton Trumbo's original story (perhaps inspired by England's rebellious Princess Margaret) won the Oscar, but the completed screenplay did not. Hepburn's chic, modern clothes and gamine haircut were copied by women around the world, which probably helped costume designer Edith Head grab the win over other films with more elaborate costumes.
It's back to Italy with A Room with View, a delightful period comedy about a young Englishwoman torn between her straitlaced fiance and an impetuous Bohemian she meets in Florence. The film received 8 Oscar nominations, tying that year's ultimate Best Picture winner Platoon. It won in three categories: Adapted Screenplay, Art Direction, and Costume Design. A Room with a View was the first worldwide hit for producer Ismail Merchant, director James Ivory, and writer Ruth Prawer-Jhabavala, who adapted the story from the E.M. Forster novel. If you think "Merchant-Ivory film" means a stuffy costume drama, this film may surprise you. It pokes fun at the buttoned-up aspects of Edwardian culture, but never dips into farce; while the romance is handled with deft delicacy.
Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Woody Allen. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 1, 2017
Friday, May 20, 2016
Summer Under the Radar Preview 2016
by A.J.
Summer doesn’t officially start until about a month from now, but it has been summer at the movies since the first weekend of May. Summer at the movies is synonymous with the big budget blockbuster movies (usually superhero movies) that you’ve known were premiering this summer whether you are interested in them or not (Captain America: Civil War, X-Men Apocalypse, Ghostbusters, Star Trek Beyond). There are also some smaller scale movies coming out this summer that not everyone may be aware of, but which I think will be a nice break from epic CGI action:
Summer doesn’t officially start until about a month from now, but it has been summer at the movies since the first weekend of May. Summer at the movies is synonymous with the big budget blockbuster movies (usually superhero movies) that you’ve known were premiering this summer whether you are interested in them or not (Captain America: Civil War, X-Men Apocalypse, Ghostbusters, Star Trek Beyond). There are also some smaller scale movies coming out this summer that not everyone may be aware of, but which I think will be a nice break from epic CGI action:
May 20th
Ryan Gosling takes a break from his roles in more experimental films to star with Russell Crowe as a pair of mismatched detectives in this
action-comedy film noir set in 1970s California. The Nice Guys is written and
directed by Shane Black, who wrote the screenplays for Lethal Weapon and The
Last Boy Scout (to name a few) and has directed Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (another
great noir comedy about a mismatched pair of detectives) and arguably the best
Marvel movie, Iron Man 3. So far, his track record as writer/director has been
very good and, hopefully, The Nice Guys will continue his streak of clever,
quality cinema.
May 27th
This is the movie I have been looking forward to the most this
year. The films of writer-director Whit Stillman have been described as "comedies of manners”
that follow privileged WASP types, but the way I describe his movies when
recommending one to a customer at the video store is: it’s like mixing a Woody
Allen movie and a Wes Anderson movie together. His latest film, an adaptation of a Jane Austen story, is the moment when critics and fans realized that
Stillman has been making modern day Jane Austen stories this whole time. Kate
Beckinsale stars as widow Lady Susan who, while staying with her in-laws, seeks to
find a husband for her daughter, and one for herself, too. Love & Friendship
has already been released in select cities and received many positive reviews.
It opens in Austin, TX on May 27th and I can’t wait.
June 24th
This is the most hesitant I’ve been about seeing any movie
for quite a while. Writer-director Nicolas Winding Refn made one of my favorite
movies of this decade so far, Drive. He followed that up with one of the most
boring and excruciating movie experiences I’ve ever had with Only God Forgives.
I’ve watched some of his other films and it seems like Drive might be the fluke in
his filmography. However, the casting of Mad Men's Christina Hendricks got me to watch
the trailer for The Neon Demon and the trailer is pretty
intriguing. Elle Fanning stars as an aspiring model that finds herself in potentially dangerous surroundings. IMDB.com classifies this movie as Horror/Thriller and
if the coin flips one way, an intense, psychological thriller along the lines of
Black Swan might be in store; if the coin flips the other way, this movie might just be
very pretty and very frustrating. I’ll wait for reviews
for The Neon Demon come in before I venture out the theater, or just stay home and
watch Drive again. Here is the trailer, which, on its own, I highly recommend
watching.
July 15th
Bryan Cranston finds himself in the world of illegal drugs
again in The Infiltrator. This time he is on the side of the authorities, U.S.
Customs to be exact, in this movie based on the true story of a drug and money
laundering sting aimed at apprehending Colombian drug lord Pablo Escobar.
Cranston is paired with John Leguizamo and they have to go undercover in the dangerous world of the drug trade. The
trailer plays up the action, but I’m interested to see what
Cranston does with this material.
August 5th
I’m surprised The Founder isn’t being released later in the
year, during Oscar season, since this seems like a movie the Academy would look
favorably upon. Michael Keaton plays Ray Kroc, the founder (but not creator)
of McDonald’s. Kroc finds the small, but fast burger restaurant run by the McDonald brothers (played
by Nick Offerman and John Carrol Lynch) and expands their business into
a larger and larger franchise. It’s not exactly what the brothers
thought they were getting into, but Kroc is determined to make the business as
big and successful as possible, and he's not going to let anyone get in his way. The Founder has an interesting subject and a
great cast, so I am on board.
August 12th
It’s
the new Woody Allen movie, so this might as well be required viewing for me. Allen’s
last two films, Irrational Man and Magic in Moonlight, were way under par in
just about every aspect, but Allen just keeps churning out film after film and
hopefully the odds are in our favor for Café Society. As always, this Woody Allen
movie features a talented cast including Jesse Eisenberg, Steve Carell,
Kristen Stewart, Cory Stoll, and Parker Posey. Eisenberg plays a young man from
the Bronx who movies out to Hollywood to help his uncle, who is a powerful agent
(Carell), and falls in love with his uncle’s secretary (Stewart). It’s a period
film, set in 1930’s Hollywood, so even if this wasn’t a Woody Allen movie I would still be very
excited to see it in theaters.Monday, September 30, 2013
Classic Movie Picks: October 2013
by Lani and A.J.
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
This month I've turned over the Classic Movie Picks to my co-blogger, A.J. While we both enjoy the spooky films that play during October, he is the real horror aficionado in this partnership. I'm looking forward to his picks, hope you enjoy them, too! - Lani
Murder...?
10/5, 2 PM - Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993)
Vampires
Anthology Horror
If you want more than one spooky story in a single movie TCM has 3 anthology horror movies airing this month.
Each month, I scour the Turner Classic Movies schedule for upcoming films that I can't miss. The highlights are posted here for your reading and viewing pleasure! (All listed times are Eastern Standard, check your local listings or TCM.com for actual air times in your area. Each day's schedule begins at 6:00 a.m.; if a film airs between midnight and 6 a.m. it is listed on the previous day's programming schedule.)
This month I've turned over the Classic Movie Picks to my co-blogger, A.J. While we both enjoy the spooky films that play during October, he is the real horror aficionado in this partnership. I'm looking forward to his picks, hope you enjoy them, too! - Lani
Murder...?
10/5, 2 PM - Manhattan Murder Mystery (1993)
The
original script for Annie Hall contained a murder mystery plot that was
ultimately cut to make the story wholly a romantic comedy. If you’ve ever
wondered what Annie Hall with a murder mystery would be like, then I highly
recommend Woody Allen’s underwatched 1993 film. Woody Allen and Diane Keaton
play couple whose marriage has grown stale until Keaton suspects their neighbor
of murdering his wife. Will a murder mystery be able to rejuvenate their
marriage? Did their neighbor even murder anyone? Manhattan Murder Mystery is
Rear Window as directed by Woody Allen and the result is a fun, romantic, and
genuinely intriguing mystery movie, and a great light start to October.
Vampires
I
remember a time when vampires used to be scary and so does TCM. Before they
were angsty, brooding anti-heroes that graced magazine covers, vampires were the
ultimate movie monster.
10/11,
9:30 PM - Isle of the Dead (1945)
Boris
Karloff stars in this movie about a group of people trying to survive a war, a
quarantine, and, as if things weren’t bad enough, a suspected vampire. This
movie is produced by one of the masters of classic horror, Val Lewton.
He’s one of the few movie producers that is also thought of as an “auteur,” a
title usually only given to directors. His films are famous for their stripped-down, sparse style and emphasis on mood and shadows.
Also
Playing…
10/13,
12 AM - Nosferatu (1922)
10/19,
9:15 PM - Mark of the Vampire (1935)
Anthology Horror
If you want more than one spooky story in a single movie TCM has 3 anthology horror movies airing this month.
10/11,
11 PM - Dead of Night (1945)
In
this Ealing Studios production a man fears that his reoccurring dream in coming
true so other guests at a country house share supernatural stories of their
own. When this movie was released in America one of the stories was cut because
U.S. distributors thought movie ran too long. They made the movie shorter, but
confusing. Fortunately for this broadcast the missing story has been restored
and should make for good spooky night.
Also
Playing…
10/20,
2 AM - Kwaidan (1965)
Monsters
Need Love Too!
10/26,
11 PM - Cat People (1942)
Val
Lewton’s films were at their best when the producer worked with director Jacques Tourneur.
Cat People is among their most highly regarded pictures. In this collaboration,
an American man marries a Serbian immigrant who fears that she will turn into a
cat person from the fables of her homeland. These RKO horror movies had a low
budget, but Lewton used that disadvantage to make better films. His films focused
less on spectacle and more on character, an eerie mood, and scaring us more by
showing us less.
All day
long on Halloween, TCM will be showing films starring Christopher Lee, including
two he starred in for Hammer Films, the UK company whose horror movies made Lee
famous.
12:15 PM - Dracula, Prince of Darkness (1965)
3:45 PM - Dracula Has Risen From the Grave (1969)
5:30 PM - Horror Express (1972)
3:45 PM - Dracula Has Risen From the Grave (1969)
5:30 PM - Horror Express (1972)
Horror
Express is not a Hammer Film but hoped to cash in on the success of those
movies by getting Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing to star in a movie with a
monster. The result is a Hammer knock off that actually works. Lee, who usually
played Dracula and other monsters, gets to be the hero. He plays on archeologist
attempting to transport his recent mysterious discovery on the Trans-Siberian
railway, but his discovery proves to be too monstrous to contain. Peter Cushing
plays a fellow Englishmen helping Lee try to stop the mysterious deaths on the
train. If Murder on the Orient Express meets The Thing meets Hammer Horror
sounds like an intriguing combination, then you won’t go wrong with Horror Express.
…and
Vincent Price
It
just wouldn’t be Halloween without a Vincent Price movie or two. Perhaps Vincent
Price being the star of the month for October is less than a coincidence. Some
of his non-horror, dramatic movies are being highlighted Thursday nights
earlier in the month. Fortunately, Halloween falls on a Thursday, so there will
be a full night of Price movies to enjoy.
8 PM - Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
9:30 PM - The Haunted Palace (1963)
11:15 PM - The Masque of the Red Death (1964)
Happy Halloween!
8 PM - Pit and the Pendulum (1961)
9:30 PM - The Haunted Palace (1963)
11:15 PM - The Masque of the Red Death (1964)
Happy Halloween!
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Allen Abroad
by AJ
I would have loved to have been around during the late 1950s/early 1960s: all the men wore sharp suits and skinny ties, women wore dresses, the music was great, movie musicals were actually good. Of course, I wouldn’t have been able to go to the better movie theater in my hometown because it was for “whites only.” But that's not part of my 60s, that is to say, my dream of the 60s.
In Midnight in Paris, the latest film from Woody Allen, an unsatisfied screenwriter/aspiring novelist played by Owen Wilson is visiting Paris with his fiance and her parents. Gil's (Owen Wilson) idea of a great time in Paris is different from his fiance's, which includes spending a lot of time with a pretentious, pseudo-intellectual played quite well by Michael Sheen. Gil pines for the Paris of the 1920s, when you might find people like F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Picasso at the same party on any given night.
A lot of reviews have tried to step around the actual plot of this film, describing it instead as a movie about a "young engaged couple forced to confront the illusion that a life different from their own is better." That plot description comes from IMDB and is similar to descriptions on other websites and periodicals. But it really isn't a spoiler to tell you that late one night as Gil takes a stroll an older model car pulls up next to him and he's invited for a ride by some revelers on their way to a party. At the party, after meeting Zelda and her husband "Scott," Gil realizes that, somehow, he's been transported to the Jazz Age Paris that has been the focus of his nostalgia. That's not a spoiler because Woody Allen is a genuine auteur and storyteller. He could make a whole movie about a couple dealing with illusions of the life they want to be living which takes place entirely in the real world, but I'm glad he didn't and chose to add magic to Midnight in Paris. But Gil wandering into 1920s Paris is the just the tip of the iceberg.
It's the not the actual historical Paris of the 1920s Gil finds himself in, but what we think that time and that city would be like. The movie is a dream of that time period. There are so many great moments with the personalities Gil runs into during his nights in Jazz Age Paris. You should recognize the names of the people he encounters from prerequisite college courses you may have taken. The most notable of these names are Gertrude Stein and Ernest Hemingway, whom Gil gets to help him with his book. Now that's an aspiring novelist's dream if I've ever heard one. I won't say too much else about his nights in bygone Paris since the charm and humor of those scenes comes from who he just happens to run into at parties and cafes. The movie doesn't go into how it is that Gil is able to wander back in time. I think the movie, like Gil, is too thrilled to bother asking how or why.
The movies Allen has made abroad have all dealt with heavy themes, even the comedies. Match Point, Scoop, and Cassandra's Dream involved murder; You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger was interesting look at people's plans and schemes; Vicky Christina Barcelona, which I enjoyed very much, was a comedy in that it wasn't a straight drama. Midnight in Paris is filled with romance, nostalgia, magic, and whimsy. It's an entirely enjoyable experience. You wouldn't think that Owen Wilson would be a great stand-in for the Woody Allen-esque character in a Woody Allen movie, but his cadence and energy are great fit for Allen's dialogue. Come to think of it, Wilson's struggling thief in Bottle Rocket isn't that far off from Allen's characters in Take the Money and Run or Small Time Crooks.
I get to watch a version of my dream of the early 60s in American Graffiti and Mad Men, though the latter downplays any nostalgia for that time period. If I ever was able to wander back to that time I'd like to be able to come back to my time as well. If I spent all my time back there what would I have to be nostalgic for?
I would have loved to have been around during the late 1950s/early 1960s: all the men wore sharp suits and skinny ties, women wore dresses, the music was great, movie musicals were actually good. Of course, I wouldn’t have been able to go to the better movie theater in my hometown because it was for “whites only.” But that's not part of my 60s, that is to say, my dream of the 60s.





Labels:
Ernest Hemingway,
Midnight in Paris,
Owen Wilson,
Paris,
Woody Allen
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)