Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Love, L.A. Style

Garry Marshall is best known as the director of Pretty Woman and is beloved by me solely for his supporting turn in Albert Brooks’ Lost in America. But at heart, this Hollywood vet is a TV guy, having honed his craft for slight, easily digestible comedy as a writer/director/producer for such hit series as The Odd Couple, Happy Days, and Laverne & Shirley. Marshall’s filmography also includes a couple of writing credits for Love, American Style. That forgettable series seems to be the precursor for Marshall’s latest big-screen project: Valentine’s Day, a “star”-packed rom-com that raked in an estimated $67 million box office last weekend.

Where Love, American Style separated its barely written romantic/comedy vignettes into self-contained scenes, Valentine’s Day is somewhat more ambitious. Set over the course of a single Los Angeles day and night on the titular holiday, the film intertwines the romantic stories of roughly 20 primary characters, like a cut-rate answer to Robert Altman’s Short Cuts.

Filled with celebrities if not always movie stars, Valentine’s Day divides its cast into settled couples (Hector Elizondo, Shirley MacLaine), new couples (Patrick Dempsey, Jennifer Garner), bitter singles (Jessica Biel, Jamie Foxx), and strangers passing in the night (Bradley Cooper, Julia Roberts). There are so many drop-ins here that Marshall has name actors (Kathy Bates) just standing around.

The location shooting adds some interest, at least more than the storylines, which are listlessly written and play as if the actors were handed scripts moments before shooting. Jessica Alba sleepwalks through a few scenes. Queen Latifah is forced into an awkwardly outdated bit of racial comedy. Taylor Swift’s big-screen debut is at first endearingly energetic and self-deprecating but ultimately overplayed. And we’re asked to take Ashton Kutcher seriously as both a florist (!?) and an adult.

But with no one given anything substantial to work with, the film emerges as something of a test as to which of its actors has real big-screen appeal, with two winners emerging, one expected and one not. Anne Hathaway is a struggling actress paying the bills as a phone-sex operator who specializes in accents — a phony character only a lazy screenwriter could love. And yet I kept wanting this overlong film (125 minutes) to drift back to her story anyway. Hathaway’s too good for this movie but doesn’t act like it. And I didn’t realize until the credits that the babysitter thinking about losing her virginity to a high school boyfriend was Emma “niece of Julia” Roberts, a young actress struggling to turn Nancy Drew into a franchise. She’s the most real thing on the screen in Valentine’s Day. Somebody find her a real role.

Categories
Opinion The Last Word

The Rant

Just when you thought it was safe to turn on the

television again on Sunday morning, there he was: Dick Cheney, yammering on and on and on, like a kid who lost a football game and thinks the referee cheated him and can’t let go of the memory that could have been. I think he is f***ing retarded.

Take that, Sarah, you palm reader. And quit using that kid of yours for political purposes. I don’t even think it’s yours. I think it belongs to one of your daughters. And I want a CD Rahm. I would love nothing more than to sit down over drinks with Rahm Emanuel. Sure, it’s not a politically correct thing to call people “retards.” And it probably wasn’t so cool when George Bush got caught on tape calling a reporter an “asshole,” but that was one thing he did that made him seem kind of funny and normal. And I will repeat that I have come to respect ol’ George for staying out of the limelight in his retirement, while the Dick keeps whining away on camera every chance he gets because President Obama brought an end to waterboarding.

Maybe that’s what they’re doing to Tiger Woods at the sex addiction clinic in Hattiesburg, where he is reported to be undergoing treatment after the revelations about all of his extramarital trysts. I am kind of fascinated by that. Just what do they do to you if you’re a “sex addict”? Do they make you have sex with, say, Joe Lieberman, so that you never, ever want to have sex again as long as you live? Just the thought of it makes me queasy.

And speaking of feeling queasy, has anyone else happened to notice a television commercial that is running in the Memphis market for a plumbing company that involves a woman in a malfunctioning bathtub? I can’t remember the name of the company, but in the commercial the woman is in the bathtub and her husband is in the bathroom with her. Suddenly, the water coming from the faucet turns a nasty dark-brown color. I think it is supposed to be rusted water, but it sure doesn’t look like it. And it spatters all over her in her luxurious bubble bath. I’m not making this up. I mean, big gobs of it hit her on the face. She doesn’t know it because her eyes are shut. If the husband were to jump in there with her and have sex in that stuff it would make for a great film to show to sex addicts at those clinics.

And speaking of sex, someone needs to tell John Mayer to shut his mouth. Why would he tell a magazine reporter that he is not attracted to black women because he has a “white supremacist” penis? Why would he even go there, especially in an interview in Playboy? That’s not just disgusting; it’s also really stupid. It’s already hard enough to sell records and concert tickets, but to say something that ludicrous and for no other reason than for shock value is nothing short of nuts. But then that seems to be the way things are these days in entertainment, politics, whatever.

And now he is trying to make up for it by tweeting about a charity. I know that I am old and tired and not fumbling around with an iPhone 24 hours a day, but why on earth would anyone want to get a tweet from someone every single day? I don’t care what John Mayer does every day. I thought it was cool that he recorded here in Memphis at Royal Studio and would like to know more about that. But I certainly don’t want to read about his white supremacist penis and I certainly don’t want to get a tweet about it.

It’s like Palin and her tea-baggy Facebook messages. It’s too much — too much information and too much interaction. This is why I stay home and watch Sanford and Son reruns as much as I possibly can. I don’t care if the technological world is passing me by. I don’t really want an iPad. I want more Redd Foxx and LaWanda Page. If Twitter had been around during their days, I wouldn’t have minded getting daily messages from them. But nowadays, too many people tweeting are just twits.

Categories
Sports Tiger Blue

Game, Set, Match: Tigers

You gotta forgive me for playing hooky on the Tigers tonight. Just got back from The Racquet Club, where I saw the best match I’ve seen in years. Andy Roddick over James Blake: 6-3, 4-6, 7-6. Won’t be a better match here all week. A shame the two best American players since Sampras and Agassi have to face each other in the first round. The unseeded Blake played with a wrapped right knee, but was still mobile enough to take the 7th-ranked (and top-seeded) Roddick to a third-set tiebreaker.

The Tigers held serve, though, in beating Tulane, 77-64, for their third straight win. A credit to Josh Pastner in his first season at the helm: his team wins the games it should. The only loss this season where the Tigers played down to their opponent was at SMU on January 30th. And they’ll get a chance to right that wrong Saturday at FedExForum.

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Great to see Roburt Sallie finally break out: four of seven from three-point country and 17 points. It simply hasn’t been the season Sallie — or Tiger fans — expected from the junior who starred in last year’s NCAA tournament. A long-distance marksman can erase deficiencies at either end of the floor for a basketball team, and Memphis has not had that consistent threat.

Wesley Witherspoon was again a factor, after getting in foul trouble during the big win over Tulsa last Saturday. Sixteen points and nine rebounds in 34 minutes is about the line the Tigers need from Witherspoon if they’re to do damage in the C-USA tournament next month. Will Coleman’s 13 points and seven rebounds earn him a passing grade tonight, as well. Nice to win a game on the road by 13 when your top scorer (Elliot Williams) is held to a dozen points.

Had to satisfy my tennis Jones tonight, but I’ll be courtside — at FedExForum — Saturday night for the rematch with the Mustangs. And back here with a postgame report, whether or not the Tigers earn their 20th victory of the season.

Categories
Intermission Impossible Theater

Brown-Bag Ballet: Catch a free lunchtime performance by Ballet Memphis

I know where I’m going noonish tomorrow.

Ballet Memphis is hosting an open rehearsal for its upcoming production of “AbunDANCE: Joyful Noise tomorrow (Thursday, February 18th) at Downtown’s Lowenstein Building from 11:30- 1:00 p.m. Brown-bag lunches are welcome.

From the press release: “AbunDANCE: Joyful Noise” is the third installment in Ballet Memphis’ “Abundance” collaborative series. This season, Ballet Memphis focuses on the marriage between music

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and dance. “Joyful Noise” features four works: Trey McIntyre’s “Second Before the Ground,” Petr Zahradnicek’s “Broad Waters,” Robert Battle’s “Takademe,” and a yet untitled piece by Jane Comfort (who collaborated with local favorite Kirk Whalum).

The Lowenstein Building is located at Jefferson and N. Main

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE: All performances will be at Playhouse on the Square. The show runs from February 27th through March 7th.
TICKETS AND MORE INFORMATION: Tickets are $10, $20, $35, $50 and $75. Contact Ballet Memphis at 901/737-7322 or balletmemphis.org

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Lunch at Fuel

Back in December, the Flyer ran a feature about Petra relocating down the street, and Fuel moving into the site at 1761 Madison.

Fuel opened for business about a week ago, and today we stopped by to check it out.

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Categories
News

What’s Wrong with the Grizzlies?

Chris Herrington analyzes the recent downfall of the once high-flying Grizzlies at Beyond the Arc.

Categories
News

New Ken Starr/Clinton Book Features Local Angle

Former federal prosecutor Hick Ewing is featured in a new book on the Ken Starr/Bill Clinton saga. John Branston has details.

Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Notes from Last Night, Trade Thoughts, etc.

I wasn’t able to do a full post-game report last night, so a few thoughts about the game and other issues here, with more to come:

Last Night’s Game: There are many reasons for the Grizzlies’ 109-95 home loss to the Suns last night. Marc Gasol having a rare bad game on both ends of the floor was a killer for the Grizzlies. In shooting 4-12 from the floor and 3-11 from the line, Gasol might have single-handedly squandered enough points to make up the 14-point difference. And at the defensive end, he was a non-factor, with Suns starting center Robin Lopez logging an out-of-character 18 and 10 and the Suns as a whole outscoring the Grizzlies in the paint 58-32. The Grizzlies couldn’t stop penetration, were late on rotations, and couldn’t protect the rim. A total defensive meltdown, but with Gasol as the back line of defense and generally most reliable defensive player among the starters, his lackluster play was perhaps the biggest problem.

Or maybe it was O.J. Mayo, who had one of those games where his lackluster size and athleticism for the two-guard position really hurt him. The bigger, more explosive Jason Richardson had a big game for the Suns, scoring 27 points on 12-17 shooting.

Categories
Memphis Gaydar News

“Raise Your Voice” Meeting

Steve Mulroy at the June rally

  • Steve Mulroy at the June rally

Back in June of last year, hundred of LGBT rights supporters gathered on the steps of the First Congregational Church in Midtown to rally for the Shelby County Commission’s proposed non-discrimination ordinance protecting LGBT county workers.

Later in October, many of those same people showed up for another rally held inside the First Congo Church. That time, the group was gathered to express anger over the destruction of a pro-gay billboard downtown. At that rally, representatives from the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC) promised the fight wouldn’t end there.

And they’ve kept that promise with a new group — called “Raise Your Voice: Speak Up, Speak Out” — aimed at uniting LGBT rights advocates in the fight against oppression. “Raise Your Voice” will hold its first planning meeting on Thursday at the MGLCC (892 S. Cooper) at 6:30 p.m. For more information, go here.

Categories
Sports

Tennis Tournament’s Worst Dressed is a Crowd Pleaser

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Not even that many hardcore tennis fans have heard of her, but American Bethanie Mattek Sands, who plays Maria Sharapova Wednesday night at The Racquet Club, is easily the most colorful player in the tournament.

And that’s another reason for fans to stick around after the headliner featuring Andy Roddick and James Blake. Talk about a clash of styles. The glamorous Sharapova is a tennis fashion plate and the poster-girl for the Cellular South Cup. Mattek Sands looks like she scrounged up her outfit at a rummage sale. But she can play, and her go-for-it style entertains the crowd in the manner of past local favorites Jimmy Connors and the Jensen brothers.