Thursday, March 27, 2014

There Is No Place Like Home

Dorothy said it best, there is no place like home.  Do you ever watch a movie and think, "Man, I wished I lived there?"  Sometimes the setting, scenery, and location of a movie makes it feel more real.  Here are some of my favorite movies where I think the location scout got it just right:


Home Alone
pic courtesy of Huffingtonpost.com
KEVIN!!!  Every time I watch this movie it makes me feel all warm inside.  Maybe it's because it reminds me of Christmas, maybe it's because this was one of the most popular movies of my childhood, but I always think about the warmth of the house in this film.  Even when the family is all together and acting nuts, because isn't that what happens during the holidays, or when Kevin is fighting off the bad guys, it's as if the house is it's own character.  The steps, that Kevin booby traps, the den that plays the movie with the gun shot soundtrack, it was Kevin's fortress and kept him safe.  Sure a movie can be shot all over the place but a majority of the scenes were shot in one home in Illinois, enjoy the trailer heavily featuring one of the best houses in movie history!



The Family Stone
photo courtesy of hookedonhouses.net

Prodigal son, Everett returns home at Christmastime with his uptight Manhattan girlfriend.  As she gets to know the family everyone wonders what they see in this less than endearing woman.    The casting in this film is great, (a secret career choice I would love to have!), the writing is great, and it takes the audience on a journey that makes all the emotional turmoil and judgements make sense, have your tissues ready!  But again I find myself drawn to the backbone of the film, the house.  Particularly the dining room table and kitchen where the storyline unfolds and relationships are tested.  This home feels lived in with a history that will hold for generations to come.




The Goonies


photo courtesy of thegoonies.org
How could the Goonies house not be in this list?  It's what they are fighting for, their homes!!  Set in a landscape that is certainly foreign to me living in Suburban New Jersey, but that's what makes it so magical.  Oregon was as far from where I lived as possible but that is what movies do, take you on a journey in a far away land where kids can become heroes, and learn some valuable life lessons along the way.  While most of the film was set outside of the house, how can you not remember the Truffle Shuffle.  According to recent articles if you go and visit there is a sign outside that says, "Goonies on foot welcome!"




Sleeping With the Enemy
photo courtesy of hookedonhouses.net
There are 2 houses in this movie, one that is so cold it freezes your blood and the other that is so cozy it warms it back up again.   You start the film on a beach house in Cape Cod, scary classical music, and a housewife who looks a little tense.  Then you realize she lives in a life of fear, getting beaten by her abusive husband.  The house matches the vibe: bare, cold, too perfect to really be lived in.  However according to Hooked On Houses.net only a facade was built for exterior shots.  Cut to Laura (played by Julia Roberts) escaping to Iowa to be closer to her mother, whose in a home, and to be free of her husband who thinks she's dead.  Unfortunately he is too smart for that, follows her there, reeks some havoc, and ultimately meets his demise.  But her Iowa house is everything the Cape Cod is not, it's country-style, cute, cozy, vintage and breathes life back into the shell of a woman she has become, plus having a cute next door neighbor helps!



Adore

Set in New South Wales Australia and again, brilliantly casted to be believable, this is a provocative movie about mothers and sons.  The story is compelling and a little creepy as two best friends fall in love with each other's sons.  I won't ruin the film since it's fairly new and I just recently watched it.  But the back drop setting in this film is breathtaking and indulgent much like the characters themselves.  And the houses each set of families live in aren't in my scope of real-life living but much Adored (Ha...Get it!)


Home is where the heart is right?  What are some of your favorite movie houses in this story from a video store!

Monday, March 10, 2014

Movies For Grown Ups!

While I love reliving my youth through film I also love movies for or from a different generation to mine. I wrote an essay once in high school that was about living in a different era.  I chose the 60's because my mom and aunt had so many fun stories about growing up in that time and down at the Jersey Shore!  I also like to live through other people's experiences whether fictional or real life stories.  Here are some of my favorite movies for a different generation:

Defending Your Life

I love the concept of this movie!  Written, directed and starring Albert Brooks also featuring the amazing Meryl Streep, this movie takes us to the afterlife.  Imagine having to justify your entire life and decisions you have made, to either move on to heaven, or get sent back to earth to figure it all out again?  Seeing events on screen and being on trial like skeletons being let out to haunt you even though you are dead.  But what if, while in "Judgement City" you meet your soulmate?  Only to find out she's practically perfect and you are not.  So do they get to go to the after life together or not?  Watch and see!









Calendar Girls


This movie is certainly near and dear to my heart since this is the part of England that my  husband comes from! It is a true story about a group of women who throw caution to the wind in the name of charity.  It stars virtually every British actress, except Dame Judi Dench (she's in this list though, don't worry!) that you should know and love!  When one woman's husband dies of Leukemia, her friend has the risque idea to have woman from the Knapely Branch of the Women's Institute pose nude for a calendar to raise funds.  Not only do characters Chris (Played by Helen Mirren) and Annie (Played by Julie Walters) have a hard time convincing the women to pose, they have to go up against the entire congregation of the Women's Institute in London to get the calendar produced and distributed. This movie is well written and directed, you'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll love Yorkshire, but most importantly you'll be entertained!



Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont



Such an endearing film and again strikes a chord for me since my grandma is now living out her golden years in a wonderful care facility.  But I couldn't imagine her not having family there to visit and support her.  Well in this movie Mrs. Palfrey has all but been abandoned in a London Retirement Hotel until she takes a tumble outside a young man's apartment.  Mrs. Palfrey and the young man, Ludovic Meyer (Played by Rupert Friend) strike up a friendship and find they have more in common with each other than people of their own age.  Based on a novel written by Elizabeth Taylor, this movie has stayed with me since I first watched it and continues to be at the top of my suggestion list.






Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day


Set in London prior to World War 2 this film details the life and times of Miss Pettigrew (Played by Frances McDormand), a down-on-her-luck governess who capitalizes on an employment opportunity to be the social secretary for American actress-singer Delysia Lafosse (Played by Amy Adams).  Immediately Miss Pettigrew is thrown into Delysia's chaotic love life and experiences some troubles of her own.  This movie takes place over the course of 24 hours and has so many plot twist and turns that it will make your head spin, but in a good way.  I can't help but watch this movie when I see it's on and get sucked right into a different time when things were both simpler and more complicated, plus the fashion is pretty cool!  Also has a pretty awesome soundtrack with many of the stars as featured artists.





The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel


How could I have this list without a Judi Dench film!  Well, last but certainly not least, an exotic adventure in India! Being marketed as a premier retirement hotel in India, Sonny (Played by Dev Patel) tries his best to run this dilapidated hotel but with little success.  All of the patrons have come here for many different reasons that soon become apparent to the audience.  Featuring the amazing Maggie Smith and Penelope Wilton, most loved from Downton Abbey, as well as Bill Nighy, this film speaks to a generation that is not of my own.  But is heartfelt, real, and gives a voice to those looking to leave the hustle and bustle of the real world behind.  Love, love, loved this film and think you will too!






So whether this appeals to you because you are of a certain age or because you like to watch good movies, these will not disappoint!  For the younger set of souls out there, it may just make you appreciate your youth a little longer, and love your mother/fathers, and grandparents a little more! Enjoy this older and sophisticated story from a video store!

Friday, February 21, 2014

Happy 20th Anniversary 1994!!

Has this ever happened to you?   You are at home scrolling through movies and you think, I really wish (Insert Title Here) movie was on, I haven't seen it in a long time...and then BAM, like a gift from above it suddenly appears?!  Well that recently happened to me with the 1994 movie Reality Bites.  I LOVE this movie! Winona Ryder at her peak, Ethan Hawke in his greasy, grungy, hotness, and a first introduction to Ben Stiller!  So on this wintry now snow day when I had nothing more to do and I finished Reality Bites and looked for another movie and saw Speed was on starring Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, also from released in 1994.  And that's when it hit me, could 1994 have been a Golden Year in Film?  You are darn right it was, seriously...google it! Films like Pulp Fiction, Forrest Gump, Shawshank Redemption, Lion King, Dumb & Dumber, Four Weddings and a Funeral, True Lies...the list goes on and on.  So Happy 20th Anniversary 1994 and please maybe some of these trailers will make you watch something you've never seen before!


It Could Happen to You

A cop, a waitress, and New York City as a backdrop...I'm in.  Nicholas Cage plays a cop and Bridget Fonda (remember her?) plays the waitress.  When Cage' s character realizes he doesn't have enough money for a tip, he offers Fonda' s character a deal, split his lottery ticket 50/50 if he wins.  The waitress thinks, why not?  In true romantic comedy fashion, the cop and his wife (played by Rosie Perez) win 4 million dollars and now the honest abe and his wife have to split their winnings with the waitress.  The media takes a hold of the story, Cage and Fonda continue to get thrown together in unplanned circumstances, and their love story develops....if it were only that easy!  But a cute light hearted film for you ladies looking for a romance injection.



Airheads

Brendan Fraser, Steve Buscemi, and Adam Sandler in a movie together?  And they are in a rock band?  This movie is a satirical play on rock metal going out of fashion being taken over by pop and this band, The Lone Rangers, have something to say about it.  So they devise a plan to hold a radio station hostage using fake guns armed with hot sauce until their song is played on the radio.  While I don't think this topic would be as easy to make fun of in our modern era of unspeakable violent tragedies, for me it reminds me of a simpler time when we didn't take ourselves so seriously.  It's as 90's as you get, from the hair, to the clothes, and I'll watch it anytime it's on.



The Crow

Starring Brandon Lee, the son of Bruce Lee, this film is a cult classic.  Definitely need to be in a "dark" mood for this one.  There is also an added sense of creepy since this was Brandon's last film as he accidentally died making this movie.  It's about a man resurrected from the dead, brought back to avenge the death of himself and his fiance, who were brutally murdered in a society that discards people at whim.  The crow, in this film, is used as a telepathic connection between Lee's character Eric and seeking out those that did him wrong.  I am always uneasy watching this movie because it is so far removed from my sense of reality, but I guess that's why we watch then, right?  I also find my self in a little bit of deja vu as Brendan looks a lot like Heath Ledger in Batman, though one fights for good but the other fights for evil, maybe it's just the make up, decide for yourself...



PCU

College 90's style...I think this movie resonates with me because my brother graduated from High School in 1994 and was heading off to Penn State University.  As a teenager myself, I wanted to live vicariously through this movie and imagine parties with George Clinton and Parliament-Funkadelic playing at his fraternity!  This film is told through the eyes of a "pre-freshman" getting his first taste of the quintessential college experience. Full of drinking, drugs, and partying with maybe a little school on the side and ultimately deciding to pick this school.  Starring a young Jeremy Piven and Jon Favreau enjoy this Lampoon-esque college comedy.



SFW

Another cult classic starring Stephen Dorff (Remember him and when he was actually considered a hunk!) and Reese Witherspoon (when she use to do artsy low budget movies) as Cliff and Wendy. They are the only survivors from a long hostage situation in a convenience store that was filmed for the whole world to see.  Cliff and Wendy become instant celebrities but have trouble relating to life outside the tragedy and continue to gravitate towards each other.  This movie is accompanied by a great 90's soundtrack featuring bands like Nirvana and Soundgarden.  It also shows what life was like back then, on the West Coast, in California and has a twist ending.  Enjoy this grungy drama-romance.


Do you have favorites from this year?  I didn't even mention other movies like Muriel's Wedding (or how I became obsessed with ABBA after watching this movie), Camp Nowhere, White Fang...so take a trip back in time and enjoy this nineties stories from a video store.

Friday, February 14, 2014

How Varisty Blues helped me get a husband

My employed years at West Coast Video provided me with a few dating opportunities, while not always ideal prospects, I did get a first boyfriend out of the deal!  But little did I know that one football movie would change my life forever.  No one would argue that Varsity Blues starring James Van Der Beek, the late Paul Walker, and Oscar Nominee Jon Voight made you want to re-invent yourself or discover the meaning of life.  But for me this movie held the key to my future.  This was a movie that 4 young men from England, coaching soccer in America, decided they wanted to rent from their local video store.  What one of these men didn't know, was that after watching Varsity Blues and going to bed, his roommate decided to watch a porno.  So that when said young man wakes up the next morning, presses eject, then closes the box that he thinks he has put Varsity Blues in, he in fact has returned a porn entitled Horny Hispanic Honey's.


Fast forward 2 weeks later and I am behind the counter returning movies customers had just dropped off, restocking shelves, generally making myself busy when in walks a very cute guy.  I watch as he browses through the racks of videos eventually deciding on something.  I eyeball him as my co-worker is assisting him with his rental when up pops a late fee notice.  He questions it, swearing, in one of the cutest accents I have ever heard, that Varsity Blues was returned weeks ago.  "Not according to our computers." says my co-worker.  At this point my assistant manager takes over and in her hand is the bright yellow box labeled Varsity Blues however inside the box is the now infamous Horny Hispanic Honey's, which she proceeds to say a little too loudly, was returned in it's place.  My inner dialogue says, "You have got to be kidding me!  The cutest guy I have ever seen, and pretty sure is checking me out too, is the porno guy!"  Just my luck....

Cut to a week or two later and porno guy has returned.  He is still very cute and comes up to my counter to rent a movie.  I proceed with the transaction gaining enough courage to ask where is accent is from.  I say, "Are you from Australia?", in which he replies, "No, I'm from England."  (I know, really smooth, we've said one sentence to each other and I'm pretty sure I've offended him)  He walks around the counter, through the detectors, and leaves.  I turn around, to frankly check him out, and I notice that he left his movie on the counter.  So I chase him outside, both of us a little red-faced, and hand him his rental.

Maybe a few weeks later a friend and I are in our local diner.  It's Friday and midnight, I have just ended my shift at work.  As we walk in I notice, in a booth 2 rows down, is my movie guy.  I say to my friend, "Oh my god, it's the guy from the video store."  He and his friend are talking to some other girls we know and here comes the moment that my life is forever changed.  He looks up, we make eye contact, he says something to his friend, they get up and occupy the booth next to us.  We chat for a little while, they walk us out to our car, and the movie guys asks me out.  My future husband, who to this day swears he did not watch the porn and was an innocent bystander, just trying to return Varsity Blues.  So thank you James Van Der Beek for helping me meet the love of my life.  And my favorite story from a video store.
 
14 Years Later!
Wedding Day 2000


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

School of Life

I have found over the years that I am definitely a visual and interactive "learner".  What I love about Documentaries is that you really have to put down your i-phone, i-pad, or tablet, watch and learn.  I know I strive to better myself as a being contributing to the world.  It may not be, by my recycling prowess or volunteering, but certainly, when you know better you do better, right?  While I may never have kids that doesn't mean I don't want to learn about how the world treats them.  I may never be a professional sports athlete but I can certainly discover the dedication, hard work, and sacrifices it takes to be one.  I can understand that someones journey may have nothing to do with their destination.  Everyone has a story, here are some of my favorites:


Sports

Senna



Ayrton Senna was a successful and dedicated Formula One Race Car driver during the 80's & 90's. This documentary depicts his life and death.  I knew Formula One was a dangerous sport and this film truly depicts the lengths drivers go to become #1.  It's chilling watching him speak up for the safety of the riders, when in a string of accidents over the course of a weekend, takes his life during a live race. It's also interesting to see how cars have evolved over decades.  This film won a BAFTA for Best Documentary and can be found, in full, on Netflix and is worth a watch.








Crash Reel



A recent HBO Documentary about Snow Boarding...or is it? Kevin Pearce was at the top of his game and getting ready for his first major Olympics until tragedy strikes and he finds himself recovering from TBI (traumatic brain injury). Not only does this film depict his hard fought recovery but, an in-depth look at how precious your noggin really is.  Kevin's entire family also deserve a tremendous amount of credit and left me with a new found respect for x-games athletes and the sacrifices they make for success.












Arts

Mad Hot Ballroom

Ballroom dancing in an inner city and kids?  For many this program keeps them off the streets, for others it builds confidence, and for some an appreciation to an underestimated art form.  These children care about each other, their community, and their futures.  Told from 3 different neighborhoods Washington Heights, Bensonhurst, and Tribeca.  I dare you to watch this clip and not smile!



First Position

Another dance documentary featuring children but instead of engaging in something extra curricular these kids revolve their whole lives around being the best at ballet.  Set against competing at the Youth American Grand Prix this film revolves around several youths and the work it takes to achieve your dream.  I was amazed and a little intimidated at the level of dedication a 9 year old that revolves their world around dance. My favorite kid is Aran you can tell that he does Ballet because he loves it, not because he is forced to do it, and damn is he good!



Children

First Circle



An intimate, informative, and often heartbreaking look at the US Foster Care system told by a woman who went through it herself.  The documentary opens up with an arrest at a meth house and an officer taking a young boy to health and welfare.  The female investigator is so sweet, I think to myself, she sees this all the time, how do you find hope in dealing with parents who don't do the one thing they are meant to do?  My heart breaks for these kids.  There is also another side to this film about parents who do the fostering.  One story resonated with me of a woman, who at one point had young girls and a teenage boy at the same time, found the boy in the girl's room, and had to call to have him removed.  What would it take to make that phone call :( A hard film to watch but I feel important to do so.


Rough Aunties

I think about this HBO documentary often.  As I've said I don't see children in my future but that doesn't mean I don't care about how they are treated and cared for.  This amazing documentary is about a group of women who treat, care, and rescue abused and neglected children in South Africa.  There are traumatized girls who have to touch a teddy bear (Bobbi Bear) to show where there were hurt so they can begin to heal.   Children who have to re-tell horrific things done to them and can recount with such chilling and gut-wrenching detail.  The women that run the organization have to be tough but the strength they find must come from the faces of these children who have no one else.  This is probably one of the most difficult films I have ever seen but so important to take in and have been forever changed by.






Animals

Buck

I have always been fascinated by horses since I was little, I even got to take a few riding lessons as a child.  I always knew and had respect for their power and grace.  Buck is not a horse, but a man that has a special way with them.  People call him the Horse Whisperer.  I hesitate to use that term because the "Dog Whisperer" that is popular in America, in my definition, is the exact opposite of Buck.  Buck's talent is in understanding horse behavior and using modification techniques I have never seen before.  He is kind, gentle, stern, but always fair...a lot different to the treatment of how he grew up.  Buck talks about his father's child rearing skills or lack there of and you cannot help but feel a sense of awe in how he chooses to interpret and live life.  He is also the inspiration behind the studio movie the Horse Whisperer, with Robert Redford, Kristen Scott Thomas, and Scarlett Johansson which is great film.  Everyone needs a Buck in their life.




An Apology to the Elephants


Another wonderful HBO documentary about the evolution of the treatment of performing elephants.  It packs a punch against the cruelty of zoos and circuses and the psychological and physical trauma elephants have endured solely for our entertainment.  **Insert soapbox moment**  I feel this documentary and others as The Cove & most recent Blackfish open a much bigger conversation about the state of modern day humanity.  When people stop seeing dogs as retail, stop supporting roadside zoos, stop wanting animals to "entertain" us.  Then change and preservation may really come.  Do we not care about the emotional well being of other living creatures?  This film makes you look deep and maybe you'll think twice about supporting anything other than organizations like the WWF






Crime

West of Memphis 

3 Teens convicted of brutally murdering three 8 year old boys.  The "ringleader" Damien Echols sent to Death Row.  His fellow convicts Jessie Miskelley and Jason Baldwin sent to life in prison.  Why I chose this documentary instead of HBO's Paradise Lost Trilogy is it brings us to present day.  The trilogy of films are absolutely worth a watch as it starts from the beginning.  This documentary meets us at the end.  It's a story of cultural hysteria, criminal injustice, and all the people it took to get these three wrongly accused men out of jail.  Produced by Peter Jackson (Yes, Lord of the Rings director) and Damien Echols himself, this film provides a wonderful debate about right and wrong and the pursuit of justice.  There will also be a feature filmed called Devil's Knot based on this story starring Reese Witherspoon and Colin Firth.  P.S. If you are on Twitter follow @damienechols his daily mantras kick my butt some days into gear.




The Ganja Queen

Did she or didn't she, I still am not sure?  The story of Schapelle Corby, an Australian woman convicted of trafficking almost 10lbs of cannabis into Bali.  This HBO film takes us through the trial, her conviction, and the devastating outcome.  I think this film raises more questions then answers and should be shown in schools about never, ever having illegal substances in foreign countries.  I am a big fan of National Geogrpahic's Locked Up Abroad because of Schapelle's story.  She is still in prison and makes me very thankful for the life I live...free.









 Double Act

World Famous Actor Ewan McGregor and buddy, fellow actor, Charley Boorman take the audience on two very amazing, profound, exhausting, thrilling, sometimes comical motorcycle trips across the world and then down the world.  While I'm taking some liberties with this being a documentary since it was a tv series, I have watched both films in one sitting, several times over, so they needed to be on this list.
 
Long Way Round

From London to New York City heading through Western Europe, Asia, Canada, and the US.  I really wanted to call them, the Best Bromance, since Ewan and Charley seem to have a true friendship with each other.  Along for the ride is a crew of producers, medical experts, and cameraman, featuring the always silly Claudio.  We watch them struggle with terrain, miss their families, and discover the world in a way I never could.  It's so entertaining and heartfelt that if you don't already love Ewan, you will now!



Long Way Down

Charley and Ewan are back!!  This time they are driving from Scotland to South Africa, oh my!   Same crew, same cameraman Claudio, different journey.  They even get to meet the Rwandan President!  Africa can be a dangerous place so I found the border crossing and different issues in each country fascinating.  In this film I found myself really enjoying Charley's journey. Grab a brew, watch, and enjoy.


So here you go...you'll laugh, you'll cry (ALOT) but my hope is you learn something you didn't know, look at the world and the people that live in it a little differently, in this documented story from a video store.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Best Movies from Around the Globe

One of the things I love most about movies is that you get to learn nuances about different countries. Maybe it's countries I've been to, want to go to, will never go to, or on my bucket-list, I am always fascinated about how other people live.  The movie industry means many different things in many different places.  Some small countries (France comes to mind) produce wonderful films.  Bollywood is world-wide phenomenon.  Here are some of my personal favorites:

Europe:

Love + Hate


This poster does not due the movie justice.  A wonderful hard-to-find independent movie about finding love in a prejudice society, you can watch, in parts, the whole movie on YouTube.  A modern day Romeo and Juliet detailing race relations in Britain.  Adam and Naseema are youths trying to grow up in a world that pays more attention to preconceived notions of cultures without actually knowing anything about them.   Adam and Naseema are drawn to each other in ways that neither of them expect questioning everything they know about life, love, and the pursuit of something greater.


Good Bye Lenin!


A delightful German tragicomedy.  Starring Daniel Brühl as Alex, recently know for playing Formula One driver Niki Lauda in Ron Howard's Rush.  What if you live in East Berlin, you're mother has a heart-attack and goes into a coma, only to awake and the Berlin wall has fallen, but she cannot endure any physical or mental shock for fear of another heart attack?  Keeping up appearances of a communist society when everyone around you experience freedoms for the first time?  This film and it's actor won critical acclaim during it's 2003 release and is worth a view.










Rust & Bone


Starring Academy Award winning Marion Cotillard and virtual unknown Matthias Schoenaerts as the leading characters.  What drew me to this movie was the fact the Marion's character Stephanie is a killer whale trainer that gets hurt from a freak accident that is very similar to documentary Blackfish and the dangers of working with orcas.  Matthias's Ali is a down on his luck single father who needs cash fast.  He meet Stephanie at a club, while working as a bouncer, prior to her accident and escorts her home.  A depressed Stephanie calls Ali after her accident and the two form an interesting friendship that evolves into something much deeper than they both expected.  I love the gritty feel of the film and what strength you can find in the impossible.






Asia:

3-Iron


A Korean movie about a drifter and an abused housewife that doesn't include much dialogue because it frankly doesn't need it.  You can feel her pain and their connection.  Tae-suk breaks into people's apartments based on take-out menu's being left on door handles.  He fixes their broken appliances, washes their clothes until one day he breaks into Sun-hwa's house.  Here the tables are turned and she watches him, while he is unaware someone is also in the house.  Together while her abusive husband is away on business they begin to break into people's homes.  They get into trouble, he goes to jail, gets release from jail and goes to Sun-hwa's house.  The rest is too hard and creative to even begin to explain so please just watch.  This film will stay with me forever as one of the most imaginative pieces of cinema I have ever seen.






Shall we Dance


I was first introduced to this movie while working at West Coast Video.  This is NOT the Richard Gere and Jennifer Lopez version, that was made because of this Japanese film.  It does not compare to the original.   Shohei Sugiyama is a successful married businessman that sees a beautiful forlorn soul looking out from her dance studio.  Mai Kishikawa is a well known dancer and Shohei becomes obsessed with her.  He has to find out more about her so enrolls in classes at the dance studio.  Again, this movie is more about the surprises that life hands you in a way you never thought it could.












Australia:

Strictly Ballroom

I guess I have a dance theme going on but this is a different story about an ugly duckling turned into a beautiful swan by the love of dance and the journey of realizing your true self both inside and out.  Fran is an employee in the dance studio that by chance gets to partner with Scott, a destined to be champion, who has gotten jaded in the ballroom world.  Together they discover the magic of dance and take on the Australian Dancing Federation at the Pan-Pacific Grand Prix.  This is the first of Baz-Lurhmann films that I have seen and as with his other films, uses music for emotion in a way that no one else does, and I am totally bought in.  Now with Dancing with the Stars and Strictly Come Dancing people have better appreciation of ballroom and the moves in this film won't disappoint!









Tomorrow When the War Began

I like to equate this film to Australia's version of the Hunger Games or even Red Dawn would be a better example.  Twenty somethings off to a camping spot for a weekend of fun only to come home and find their town without power and their parents, neighbors, and loved ones held hostage by a foreign military group.  A plan is formed, chaos ensues, bonds are made, broken, and tested.  I love a good action film, I love a good teen novel, and I love me some foreign viewing!  It's an easy movie to watch and it is supposed to be part of a trilogy.  I really hope 2 and 3 are made!  One notable actor that American audiences would know is Phoebe Tonkin of the CW shows Vampire Diaries and The Originals.







Bollywood:

Bride or Prejudice

An Bollywood re-telling of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice full of India's culture, music, dancing.  Starring Martin Henderson, from the Grudge, and Aishwarya Rai, once known as the most beautiful woman in the world!  As characters Darcy and Lalita we are once again taken on a romantic roller-coaster of, I love you, I hate you, I love you.  As I've said in previous blogs, I am a Jane Austen fanatic so I am willing to watch any movie based on the books.  This is fun, a little cheesy, and all things Bollywood!  The end credits are really fun and worth watching. 








So, here you go...why go outside in this winter weather when you can travel the world from the comforts of your own home in this sometimes subtitled story from a video store!

Monday, December 16, 2013

In a Downton State of Mind

Downton Abbey is about to hit American televisions again this winter and I can't wait!  Not only because my British relatives and friends have already seen most of this season and I have been trying to avoid spoilers like the plague, but also because I LOVE period dramas.  I find other time periods so fascinating for so many different reasons.  What we were women and men like then?  What did they wear?  Culture?  But I always seem to gravitate most towards Britain's history.  Maybe because I am self proclaimed anglophile and maybe because they have so much history how could you not be fascinated by it? So here are some of my favorite and must-see British Period Dramas:

Bright Star



The real life romance of Poet John Keats and Fanny Brawne.  It's 1818 and these two shouldn't really like each other.  John is a quiet, smart, sometimes aloof (though I think more shy) poet focused on his work.  He is an artsy type that wouldn't know a petticoat from a bonnet.  Fanny Brawne on the other hand is beautiful, charming, fashionable, but has more depth to her than you would expect.  Maybe this is where don't judge a book by it's cover would come into play for both of them.  John teaches Fanny poetry and a budding romance develops quick and deep, but alas short-lived.  This was not a story I was familiar and what an amazing job by Jane Campion, who you may know from the Piano and the most recent Golden Globe nominated Top of the Lake.

Becoming Jane


What girl doesn't love Jane Austen?  In my opinion she invented the foundation for every romantic comedy I have ever seen.  But who knew she had a romance of her own?  I love this movie, despite Anne Hathaway. Oh Anne has her very own blog dedicated just to her Anne Hathaway Blog, but for me this movie is all about James McAvoy and his character Thomas Lefroy.  It is unproven that this romance even existed but to think that Pride and Prejudice might have come from her real life and to see this on the screen was amazing.  My breath catches in my throat every time I see this scene and moment 1:19.  The look he gives her just makes me melt.  The chemistry of the two actors is authentic and palpable and I watch this movie whenever I need a romance injection.

 North and South


I'm taking a little bit of liberty here as this isn't a film but the fact that you get such build from this story makes it my absolute favorite BBC miniseries ever!  It is based on Elizabeth Gaskell's 1855 novel about the North of England when industrialization was taking place.  This is probably the most boring description about the most fantastic romance between Margaret Hale, a demur daughter of London bred scholar, and Robert Thornton, a tough hard-working mill owner from the North.  Margaret and her family must move to a fictional Northern town called Milton so different from their Southern estate that it takes the whole family by surprise how different the North and South really are.  Robert falls in love immediately but gets shunned by Margaret before she truly realizes what being a good man means.  I want to give more away but I won't because the story deserves better and makes me wish I could watch it for the first time all over again.  Richard Armitage is an outstanding romantic lead and makes me wonder why he doesn't play roles like this more often!

Persuasion
Photo Courtesy of imdb.com
Sigh...my favorite Austen novel.  How could I write a blog about period dramas and not include Jane? There is just something about a lost love only to be found again based on the content of one's character that makes me love this book and film.  Something about second chances, mistakes of youth, and rediscovering love.  There have been many adaptations but my favorite is the 2007 version starring the wonderfully British Sally Hawkins and Rupert Penny-Jones.  Sally Hawkins plays Anne Elliot so well, you want to root for Anne, and feel her pain when she sees Captain Wentworth after so many years.  Anne doesn't say a lot but you can feel her silent torture and regret from a look or a breath.  Jane Austen takes these characters on an emotional journey that I am more than willing to follow.  There was a time when matches were made based on family history, social standing, and money.  But what happens when the one person you love is the one person you think you can't have? Read it, watch it, read and watch it again, I persuade to do so.

If you haven't seen Downton yet (have you been living under a rock?) catch up before the new season starts.  Immerse yourself in a time that's not your own and enjoy these British Period stories from a video store.