Film Review- Don Jon

Genre: Film

Grade: A
Notable People: Joseph Gordon- Levitt, Scarlett Johansson, Julianne Moore, Tony Danza, Directed by Levitt
Title: Don Jon

Review – Wanted to see this movie that won all kinds if Indie awards months ago- but it came and went really quickly while in we were in Vermont. Found it at second run theater and…WOW…I LOVED this movie. Levitt is a revelation as a porn addicted, confession going, woman shark, New Jerseyite. This movie is funny and profound, and he gives it an amazing run both as director and lead. Scarlett defines the Jersey girl in this movie- she really worked at this part and Moore is her usual brilliant self in a wonderful role. Danza is more or less an aging Tony- but he does it really well and their Sunday Italian dinner scenes are priceless. The younger sister only has one line the hole movie and it defines the whole movie in a way. This is a pleasantly surprising sleeper-keeper.

Film Review- The Hunger Games- Catching Fire

Genre: Film

Grade: A

Notable People: Jennifer Lawrence and a cast to die for, Directed by Francis Lawrence
Title: The Hunger Games- Catching Fire

Review – Movie two in the trilogy; these films have exceeded my widest expectations in capturing the thrill of the books. And, I think they also work for someone who has not read the books. Lawrence grows more luminous with each film role-and has totally captured Katniss… and the supporting cast is just magnificent- especially Stanley Tucci, Woody Harrelson, Donald Sutherland and Elizabeth Banks…plus this one adds Philip Seymour Hoffman. This a GREAT holiday movie…shame we have to wait a year for the finale.

Film Review- The Book Thief

Genre: Film

Grade: A

Notable People: Geoffrey Rush, Emily Watson, Sophie Nelisse, Directed by Brian Percival
Title: The Book Thief

Review – Unbelievably touching art house film about an Ann Frank type in Stuttgart Germany at start of the War. This girl, Sophie, is going to be a film giant. Brilliant!!!! Rush and Watson are magnificent and the story is really well told- though the narration is a bit schmaltzy. We mostly cried for two hours…extraordinarily moving, and it WILL make you think. How could this happen?

Film Review- American Hustle

Genre: Film

Grade: A-
Notable People: Christian Bale, Bradley Cooper, Amy Adams, Jennifer Lawrence, Jeremy Renner, Directed by David O. Russell
Title: American Hustle

Review – Very entertaining film about ABSCAN Scandal of the early 70’s in New Jersey; a major con game that involved the FBI and all kinds of politicians. Really captures the time and place well and the movie goes along at a wonderful pace- enchanting, engaging, exciting. Bale and Cooper are twin towers trying to outsmart each other and to look the most ridiculous in their ultra 70’s garb. Adams sizzles in a role unlike any she has played before and Lawrence is almost unrecognizable as a gum chewing, beehive-do, wise-ass Jersey girl. Renner steals the show as legendary Camden politico Carmine Polito. Great movie for a cold night. I graded it down a bit, as it seemed a bit predictable and the music people missed an amazing opportunity with the score- which was mediocre. See it- you’ like it.

November in Vermont and the coast of Maine

Happy Day to all:

Two photo options again this edition- so as not to bore EVERYONE. I’ve attached around 30 of “best of” to go along with the commentary or you can see the whole Monty via the Shutterfly link attached below,. Took a bunch this week with my new Bull Goose Looney camera- which I have no idea how to use, but takes pretty good photos anyway. Photos are of our first snow on Sunday, our ridiculous efforts at faux security and our last hurrah trip to Maine coast for an overnight.

http://share.shutterfly.com/action/welcome?sid=2CauG7RyxZMm-

We are in crazed process of trying to pack up/shut down house for winter and head back to Ohio on Thursday. We embrace the mantra that everything that could go wrong will do so. Had our entire second floor electric go out this week, which led us to finally track down the fabled electrician. In a gesture of great goodwill- he showed up a little before 7 am on Friday and went around the house like a whirlwind checking things out. We had a list of about a dozen issues but he got the main stuff done- restoring electric and getting long dormant flood lights working for security. Before he came we tried to find the breaker again- throwing all 40 plus breakers (in three distinct boxes) to see what controlled the upstairs; nothing worked but we did get almost all of them labeled and managed to shut down our internet and phone for hours.

We then went down to the bitter end with the oil company- who finally yesterday came and fished the pump out of the $1200 worth of fuel oil they had delivered to us unasked for. Three trips, lots of hassling and a house that has smelled of fuel oil for weeks….it’s fair to say that contractors in Vermont even exceed the lowly national standards for reliability and predictability.

Woke Sunday morning to a winter wonderland- which was amazing (see photos) but has lost its luster as it is now under 20 degrees and we have to do a bunch of outside work. Our punch list may well lead to punches (I believe that is how the term derived?). By Sunday, we already so burnt out from making lists, and trying to change locks, that we took off for an overnight to the coast of Maine (see many , many photos)…highly recommended. We visited Kennebunkport- but did not see George and Barbara, went to the legendary Maine diner and spent a great morning at Ogunquit. Then we had to come home and continue our assault on the house.

A few weeks ago- some people put it in our head that we needed to have home security so that someone would not take all of Karin’s lovely things she left for us. So we began a two week obsession with security options. Suffice it to say- we are un-securable; no reliable phone service to conduit a monitoring plan and police response time of about an hour- during which we think the house could probably be emptied out and reduced to studs. We then looked at non- monitored home alarm systems- but found they would not work in a closed down, freezing house. So we came up with our own brilliant security plan, consisting of lots of padlocks, boarded up windows and doors, fake security signs, fake cameras and bunch of little door and window alarms we got on the internet. I doubt we will become more secure- but we will use a lot of batteries and have a lot of red lights constantly flashing (see photos).

The leaves are all down, the cold has set in and we have to empty out the house…..must be time to leave. So- this is it for the Vermont Blog for 2013. May resume when we get back in spring- since doing an Ohio blog leaves me (and I’m sure, you) short of inspiration. Check out the photos, and have one last major thrill.

We’ll see you all down the road.

Stu

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Film Review- Prisoners

Genre: Film

Grade: B+

Notable People: Hugh Jackman, Jake Gyllenhaal, Paul Dano, Viola Davis, Maria Bello, Terrence Howard Directed by Dennis Villeneuve
Title: Prisoners

Review – Very dark movie with a lot of red herrings thrown in. Good thriller that went on a bit too long and seem to drag. Shockingly out of character and good performance by Jackman and usual excellent role for Gyllenhaal. Kind of depressing movie but good for a rainy day. Don’t see if you are squeamish about sex offenders. Dano(from Little Miss Sunshine) is an amazing actor.

Stick Season in Vermont

Happy Stick Season to all: Go SOX!!!!!!!!!

My newest form of organized compulsion is to provide my readers (Do I really have any?) with the two photo options- so as not to bore EVERYONE. I’ve attachéd around 25 of “best of” to go along with the commentary (you’re supposed to stop and look at the attached photos that relate as you read the captivating dialog) or you can see the whole Monty via the Shutterfly link attached below,. Too many good photos to take here in the Green Mountains.

http://share.shutterfly.com/share/received/welcome.sfly?fid=6791ea390a85f09d6cbbd47cbb382743&sid=2CauG7RyxZMmc

Stu gets a new camera: this is not quite accurate as the kids and Jenn got me a fancy new cannon digital camera with a big old lens last Christmas. But, Stu is very intimidated by new boxes- so it took me 10 months to open it up. Then it took me an hour to get the strap on and another two hours to get it charged and figure out how to turn it on. At this point, I felt compelled to take it out for a walk; so I did the seven mile loop up the logging road , around to Belmont Rd (all downhill) and the two miles back on the railroad tracks(beat the train home by five minutes, which is good,  as I could not figure out where I would jump off to when it came). So…I know nothing about digital cameras and could barely figure out where the shutter was- but took a bunch of pictures, which Max tells me look better than ever (Photoshop is my new best friend). I have an acquaintance from my folk club that is a pro photographer and I pounded on his door on the way so he could show me how to turn it on and off, but alas, he did not have the grace to be home. It is now safely put away where I can do no harm to it. I have attached few shots for your humor.

Boston: We did our long awaited trip to Boston last week to honor Jenn’s 50th. She had never been there and me only briefly. Luckily, the Sox were in Detroit whipping the Tigers, so it was not as crazy as it could have been. It’s a three hour drive (tried to take the train- but it now goes to NYC and THEN to Boston- about 13 hours worth of scenic travel). Waltzing along on a bright sunny day in the 70s- we immediately turned the wrong way on I-91 and by the time we figured out (sleeping navigator!) we had to cut all the way across Mass. on Route 2…very scenic and harmonious. Then we hit Boston traffic with no idea where we were going and managed to make it safely to Cambridge and the magnificent Hotel Marlowe. The hotel had sent me an e-mail welcoming me days before and asked If I would like to send a photo to put up in the room. Since it was Jenn’s 50th and she is getting old, I sent a pretty racy one of her in better days getting ready to go to a Halloween party in a cat woman outfit (sorry- if you want to see that one on the wall –you’ll have to e-mail me and I’ll have to leave the house for 24 hours to send it). When we got there it was not up yet, so I snuck down and asked if they had gotten it and the whole front desk team went bananas. Apparently, most people send pictures of their pets or children to make them feel at home while away… DUH…Once settled in we did the 3 plus mile walk to Hah-vid Square and communed with the Geeks. We had an extraordinary time. The hotel sent up Champagne and goodies and each night we had a wine hour (see Stu on the velvet couch after four glasses of Red). We did the extraordinary Gardiner Museum (don’t miss this place when you get to Bean-town and walked most of the Freedom Trail; this is an old place you know. Paul Revere is damn everywhere. It was almost 75 degrees both full days we were there and then we had the treat of being taken out to a great Italian dinner in the North End with my kid cousins Travis and Alex (more later). On the way home, we made the pilgrimage to Walden Pond – along with 100 hormonal high school students and then had a real treat of fantastic foliage on the country road drive home (It’s quite a bit south of us and a little remedial in getting the leaves turned). Boston will now be our go- to urban experience while we are in Vermont.

Stick Season in Vermont- So, Vermont has six (not four) seasons like everyone else. Stick Season is the time between when the leaves fall and the first ski snow comes, and it is filled with bare tress and downed sticks…ergo the name. Vermonters love winter and the they love the short summer and glorious autumn, but they just hide away during stick season. Not sure where everyone goes, but it’s kind of dead and a little depressing. Upside is that local restaurants and other attractions offer all kinds of deals to try to get people to leave their houses ( we had a four course diner that was not even an “ early bird” last night for $12.95). The leaves are gone, it gets kind of gray and the farmers’ markets close for the season in most places. We hit one of the last markets of the outdoor season at the bull- goose of all markets, in Rutland, last Saturday. Who knew there were so many root vegetables to be eaten? So, have you ever seen a stalk of brussel -sprouts? (see photo). Wow.. what a work of nature. I thought they just came ready to eat..but apparently they come on giant stalks that you pick them off, which has to be registered with the local sheriff as deadly weapon. People also use Stick Season to prepare for winter, which mean chainsaws going ten hours a day and amazing woodpiles appearing to dot the landscape. Snow is coming soon, so all this activity may cease, and people will come out and dinner will be more expensive.

Modern Urban Living- As I had mentioned, we had a wonderful time with my kid cousins, Travis and Alex, in Boston. After a marvelous dinner on the North End (think Little Italy), we went back to their lovely co-op apartment just down the street from the Boston garden (no parquet floors in the apartment). It’s a two bedroom, but one bedroom is devoted to Alex’s clothes…mostly shoes. She may approach 100 pairs of shoes… it was an overwhelming sight. And Travis’ closet has all his shirts and pants lined up in a color scheme based on the colors of the rainbow…very impressive. What we learned is that young urban folk make sure to have plenty of shoes, toilet paper, and paper towels on hand, lest they get stranded in a snow emergency…you have to see the pictures

Another Dinner Party- People in Vermont appear to love dinner parties, especially in stick season. I think they mostly like checking out other peoples’ houses. We had a reunion with our three friends from our first dinner party, in July, at our house (the thrice divorcee and the military couple) and had a lovely  time. Jenn decided she would make homemade bread and apple crisp ,and then spent ten hours doing it, using about $200 dollars worth of electricity to help the bread rise in front of our eclectic heaters . We had the heater in our bathroom going all night long, which seemed to turn the whole upstairs into a sauna. We are trying to not use our furnace, so we have many little heat sources that go on and off all day long..We actually took off the plastic and opened up our formal living room, which still looks as if Karin had left it yesterday (we’ve made it a shrine, I think). And, we lit our fireplace for the first time. Now, we continue to find gifts and treasures from Karin every day, which may go on for years…but…she had left the fireplace set with a fire and ready to go before she left which took us four months to discover. Match, flame, boom (see photo of roaring fire). Karin will be enshrined soon in the house sellers hall of fame. Dinner was great (I made my famous Bolognese with meat sauce made from our local organic farmer, and from the recipe I learned by watching Clemenza teach Michael to cook for 100 guys in Godfather One ( my best cooking, as well as most of philosophy of life comes from the film). We ended the night watching the Sox tromp the Cards in Game One.

We’re now on a countdown to head back to Ohio- three weeks as of yesterday…and traumatized by the prospect. Lots to do- both here and there, and a transition we are a bit overwhelmed by. Snow is coming soon it appears, but tonight is the local Halloween party and I will be playing music with the gang (Evil Ways, Witchy Woman, Black Magic Woman, The Monster Mash). Soon my Blog/ Rambles will come to an end for the season, but until then………
We hope this finds everyone well, just because…

Stu

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Special Edition- Best of TV Serials

Since we moved to Vermont and movie theaters are pretty inaccessible- we have become major serialized TV watchers. TV is not what it used to be and many of the shows now on HBO, Showtime or Netflix have the best directing and acting Hollywood has to offer. I read a story in USA today a couple of months ago and then heard a similar one on NPR about a noted critic who has written a book about what he calls “the golden age of television”. His premise is that since The Sopranos came on the air fifteen or so years ago, TV has been revolutionized and in many ways has more consistent quality than films (he is talking about premium, serialized commercial free TV). I’m not sure I fully agree with that, but I see his point, and we are constantly mesmerized by the quality of what is being produced on the small screen. So, I have been thinking for awhile (Vermont does that to you) about doing an overview rating of these premium TV series. The list below is only what I consider to be the highest quality and is not all inclusive (I have not really watched some of what may be very high quality shows such as The Wire, Nurse Jackie, Breaking Bad or Mad Men enough to fairly evaluate). So- here’s a list of my “must-see TV”.
Stu’s Reviews
A++:
The Newsroom- just finished 2nd season on HBO. Jeff Daniels in the role of a lifetime as a right wing liberal news anchor on a CNN type network. Great cast. Unbelievable writing. Best show on TV.
Homeland- in midst of season three on Showtime. Clair Danes, Damian Lewis, Mandy Patimkin and F. Murray Abraham make this CIA- confused terrorist drama riveting.
A+:
Boss- Kelsey Grammar in a career altering role as the complex, corrupt and all powerful mayor of Chicago. Two seasons on STARZ.
House of Cards- The amazing Kevin Spacey tales to the small screen as a classic southern senator in this Washington bashing drama complete two seasons on Netflix.
Treme- Three seasons down on HBO, with a cast of somewhat unknowns and cameos by a who’s who of New ‘Awlins royalty, captures the angst, joy, food and music of post Katrina with great accuracy and detail- following the lives of six disparate and fascinating main charters. Very underrated.
United states of Tara- ran for six seasons on Showtime and then cancelled, this show was too exotic and out there for the masses. The always great Toni Collette delivers the performance of a lifetime as a multiple personally with up to eight alters. The portrayal of a family living in this chaos is both majestic and tragic. John Corbett is a revelation as her husband. I loved this show and could not stop watching.
A:
Boardwalk Empire- Steve Buscemi as the mob boss of prohibition era Atlantic City is spellbinding. Great attention to historical detail with amazing cast and captivating story lines. In third season on HBO.
Games of Thrones- completed second season on HBO- medieval dram derived from cult book series with cast of thousands. Only show in history to knock off the leading man in first season. Great cinematography for small screen and wonderfully engaging characters.
True Blood- just completed sixth season on HBO; also from cult book series. Have made vampires ultra chic. Was best show on TV for a number of years, with fantastic ensemble cast and a kick in the ass at every turn,- but gotten a little out of hand in last two seasons; may be running its course.
Shameless- William H. Macy…enough said. Brilliant as the alcoholic and narcissistic head of an almost homeless family in Chicago. Emmy Rossum is his oldest daughter- an opera singer turned absolute vixen..who does not want to cuddle with her. Finished third season on Showtime. Can’t wait for fourth in January. This show is utterly outrageous.
Dexter- Michael Hall as the most endearing serial killer in history. This how just completed its eighth and final season on Showtime. An amazing run for the subject material. Very good cast and excellent writing, the show kept you one edge for eight years but ran out of gas at the very end.
A-:
House of Lies- Don Cheadle plays the most cunning adman of all time; spin is his middle name,; with team of four whose chemistry is non paralleled. This show can be very funny and very touching at the same time, and moves quicker than the speed of light. These people are never at a loss for words. Kristen Bell is excellent as his protégé/ unrequited love interest and his two sidekicks are worm the price of admission. A bit on the surreal side- it has completed two seasons on Showtime.
Weeds: Mary Louise Parker starred for eight season as the housewife from southern California who becomes a major pot dealer and lives a life of constant drama. Started out as a don’t miss show- but faded as time went by. Really great cast featuring Kevin Nealon and the very scene stealing Justin Kirk as her lovelorn bother in law. Very entertaining a for long, long time.
Spartacus- three season on STARZ…guilty pleasures ,,,surreal hot sex and almost animated violence. Lost interest midway through third season.
New shows:
Orange is the New Black- first season Netflix. Women in prison comedy- drama by creator of weeds, highly entertaining. Great characters.
Masters of Sex- three shows into first season on Showtime, details story of sex research pioneers Masters and Johnson. What a period piece. Sharp writing and wonderful cast. Not too sexy, but stimulating. Historically accurate.
Foyles War: Six season on Netflix, very unusual British BBC drama features the extraordinary Michael Kitchen as a coastal England police superintendent during World War Two. The show starts in 1939 and follows the plot trough the war. He may be the most admirable character ever to be on a TV show. We love this show- but you have to like slow.
Sherlock Holmes- this two season BBC series updates the classic tales to modern times with a flair with stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Sherlock Holmes and Martin Freeman as Doctor John Watson. Eagerly awaiting third season. Very British, very cool.

Novel review- The Whistling Season

Genre: Novel

Grade: B

Notable People: Ivan Doig
Title: The Whistling Season

Review –Doig writes really well about the West in the late 19th century- particularly about the settling of Montana and the huge irrigation projects to water the west. This is the third of his with that theme in the background. I like his characters a lot and this is a really good story; most of which takes place in a one room ,eight grade schoolhouse. Morrie Morgan, the reluctant teacher of all the kids- is a GREAT character. It’s a book with a lot of good feel- and if you like historical kinds of fiction- you’ll most likely like this. That being said- the grade went down because I thought it petered out at the end- and was wrapped up a bit too cleanly for my taste. Still- an easy read, and if you have not been “Doigged” before- you may want to give it a try.