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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Star Wars: The Last Jedi

In his May 17, 1999 review of The Phantom Menace, Roger Ebert wrote “The dialogue is pretty flat and straightforward, although seasoned with a little quasi-classical formality, as if the characters had read but not retained “Julius Caesar.” I wish the “Star Wars” characters spoke with more elegance and wit (as Gore Vidal’s Greeks and Romans do), but dialogue isn’t the point, anyway: These movies are about new things to look at.”

Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker

Ebert gave The Phantom Menace 3 1/2 stars. Had he been around to review The Last Jedi, he would have had to add several more stars to his scoring system.

In 1999, it had been 16 years since Return of the Jedi, the final installment of George Lucas’ epoch-defining space opera. Those of us who had been fans from the beginning never thought we would see another Star Wars movie, and the anticipation was intense. Ebert, like everyone, was dazzled by the visuals, which heralded the maturation of CGI. But the elemental, mythological storytelling that had made Star Wars a cultural phenomenon in 1977 was missing, the dialog was awful, and the acting ranged into the embarrassing. The prequels were wildly uneven, but there were still hints of what we knew Star Wars could be.

The Last Jedi feels like the fulfillment of that missed potential. It is the most visually stunning of the eight Star Wars films, the characters speak with the elegance and wit that Ebert wanted, and the acting is often outstanding. It is exciting, funny, cute, tense, melancholy, smart, goofy, unexpected, and occasionally profound. The opening night audience at the Paradiso burst into applause four or five times. I cried through two Kleenexes. But most importantly, The Last Jedi is fun. In a year with some astonishing big budget misfires, it represents the pinnacle of 21st-century Hollywood filmmaking.

John Boyega and Gwendoline Christie do battle in The Last Jedi.

The success of this film can be credited to two people. The first is writer/director Rian Johnson, whose 2005 debut film Brick is an indie classic, and who directed one of the greatest hours of television ever produced, “Ozymandias”, the penultimate episode of Breaking Bad. Johnson is clearly a first generation Star Wars geek, but he is skilled and clear-eyed enough to craft a universal story. Johnson’s talent for visual composition is in the same league as Spielberg and Hitchcock. Lucas’ prequels were overloaded riots of color and movement. J.J. Abrams’ The Force Awakens was successful when it aped Lucas’ superior 1970s style. Johnson’s frames are mathematically precise without succumbing to Kubrickian coldness. He’s not afraid to swoop the camera around, but there’s a reason for every movement. From the clarity and acumen of his action scenes, he’s been studying the lessons of Fury Road. But where The Last Jedi exceeds all previous Star Wars movies—and 99 percent of other movies as well—is the use of color. Deep reds, lustrous golds, inky blacks, and vibrant greens reflect and reinforce the characters’ emotions.

Daisy Ridley faces the Dark Side in The Last Jedi

In the tradition of the Saturday morning sci-fi action serials like Zombies of the Stratosphere that inspired Star Wars, Johnson’s screenplay is full of red herrings, hairpin reversals, and betrayal. He was given too large a cast and too complex a situation, and he not only made the most of it, but left the story better and tidier than he found it. Ebert’s Phantom Menace review closes with these lines: “I’ve seen space operas that put their emphasis on human personalities and relationships. They’re called Star Trek movies. Give me transparent underwater cities and vast hollow senatorial spheres any day.” The Last Jedi delivers on both fronts in a way the Abrams’ nü-Trek simply doesn’t.

Not only that, but Johnson can work with actors like Lucas never could. One of the miracles of the original Star Wars is that Lucas, preoccupied with the various technical disasters unfolding around him, largely left the actors to their devices. And yet Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, and Mark Hamill managed great performances. In the prequel era, it became quickly obvious which actors could wing it, like Ewen McGregor, and which ones depended on dialectic with the director, like poor Natalie Portman. Not all actors in The Last Jedi are created equal, but you get the sense that Johnson has set everyone up to give the absolute best performance possible. Daisy Ridley’s physicality carried her through The Force Awakens, but in The Last Jedi she seems more relaxed and playful, even if her default mode is still “scary intensity”. Oscar Issacs stretches out into Poe Dameron, and by the end of the movie his look is echoing Han Solo’s Corellian flyboy, pointing toward the Harrison Ford-shaped hole he’s filling in the cast.

Kelly Marie Tran and John Boyega

John Boyega’s Finn is unleashed with a new partner, Rose, played by comedian Kelly Marie Tran. Their chemistry is near perfect, and their subplot bounces them off Benicio Del Toro as DJ, delivering a crackerjack turn as one of the shady underworld figures Star Wars loves. Lupita Nyong’o’s Maz Kanata makes the most of her extended cameo. I hope we see more of her next time around, but for now it makes me smile that the phrase “Maz flies away in a jetpack” must have appeared in the screenplay.

Adam Driver as Kylo Ren

Comic book movies are ascendant right now, but the biggest lesson the Marvel and DC teams can learn from The Last Jedi is that you need quality villains to make epic stories work. Johnson’s excellent script gives Adam Driver, a fantastically talented actor, the juiciest role, and he grabs it with both hands. Caught between Supreme Leader Snoke, Andy Serkis’ preening, snarling big bad, and Domhnall Gleeson’s General Hux, the latest in a long line of arrogant Imperial Navy twits, Kylo Ren comes into his own as a complex, conflicted character. In battle, Kylo is a lupine predator, but his eyes are haunted. The Last Jedi is a sprawling ensemble piece, but Driver and Ridley are the real co-leads.

Carrie Fisher as General Leia Organa

Most of the audience’s tears are reserved for Carrie Fisher, who died a year ago, shortly after completing her work on The Last Jedi. Perhaps it is hindsight, but Fisher looks frail and vulnerable as General Leia Organa, her physical appearance reflecting the increasingly desperate straights of the Resistance she leads. But there is fire in her eyes and steel in her voice, and the bravado sequence Johnson designed for her where she at long last manifests her Force powers drew gasps and cheers. We can all only hope to go out on such a high note.

But if The Last Jedi belongs to any one actor, it is Mark Hamill. Luke Skywalker has been both a blessing and burden to Hamill, who at heart seems to be an amiable geek who would be perfectly happy doing cartoon voice acting for the rest of his life. (He is the best Joker ever, and I will fight anyone who disagrees.) Hamill gives the performance of a lifetime as a man who finally broke under the weight of his own legend. The boys who grew up idolizing Luke Skywalker are men now, and Hamill’s performance is full of the regret, hard-won wisdom, and grit that age brings. Luke, the focus of the original Hero’s Journey, provided generations with a mythical model of how to grow up. Now, he gives a model of how to pick yourself up and keep going through a life that didn’t turn out quite like you thought it would.

Daisy Ridley and Mark Hamill

The second person on whom the success of The Last Jedi depends is Kathleen Kennedy. The Lucasfilm honcho is simply the best producer working today. She’s driving the biggest bus in the business, and succeeding spectacularly where so many others fail. Kennedy has practically infinite resources at her disposal, but so did the producers in charge of Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, Transformers: The Last Knight, The Mummy, X-Men: Apocalypse, and so many other corporate vomitoriums of 2017. The key to producing good movies—and really to any artistic endeavor—is creating a healthy process. This is something that Kennedy, alone in contemporary Hollywood, seems to understand. This year alone, she fired the directors of not one but two Star Wars movies while they were shooting, an unprecedented move that prompted grumbling in both the fan community and the swank brunch spots of Hollywood. But even before The Last Jedi premiered to boffo box office (As of this writing, earning more than $160 million in TWO DAYS), she gave Johnson the deal of a lifetime—a whole Star Wars trilogy to himself. She saw Johnson’s professionalism, knew what she had in the can and wanted more of it. And if you spend 152 minutes in the Star Wars universe in the coming days and weeks, you’ll want more of it, too.

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From My Seat Sports

Frank’s Faves 2017 — Part 1

This week (and next): A countdown of the 10 most memorable sporting events I attended in 2017.
Joe Murphy (NBAE/Getty Images)

Mike Conley will be good again someday, right? Right?

10) Grizzlies 110, Pacers 97 (March 29) — Things seemed so simple then. Familiar. Mike Conley played like the All-Star he’s long been, spurring the Griz to a 14-point lead by the end of the first quarter on his way to a 36-point night. Tony Allen started, played 33 minutes and helped partially shackle Pacer star Paul George (22 points). Zach Randolph came off the bench and scored 17 points in 24 minutes. Marc Gasol missed the game with a minor injury, but 40-year-old Vince Carter stepped in and scored 21, draining four of six shots from three-point range. The win clinched a .500 record for the Grizzlies and moved them a step closer to securing a seventh straight playoff berth. And David Fizdale seemed like a rising star among NBA coaches. The Grizzlies have delivered many nights like this one at FedExForum. They will again.

9) Tigers 83, Mercer 81 (December 2) — If a good basketball game is played in front of more empty seats than full, does it count as a good game? Played right after the Tigers’ exhilarating AAC football championship game in Orlando, the contest drew fewer than 5,000 fans to FedExForum. (Probably fewer than 3,000. I didn’t actually do a head count.) The Tigers fell behind, trailing by nine at halftime and by eight with six minutes to play. But freshman Jamal Johnson drilled a three-pointer with less than 30 seconds on the clock to force the first overtime, and the Tigers hit 16 of 18 free throws in the two overtime sessions to snag a precious win in what is sure to be a trying season for Tubby Smith and friends.

8) Cardinals 9, Redbirds 3 (March 30) — I’ve yet to take my mother-in-law to St. Louis for a Cardinals game, but she can now say the Cardinals came to Memphis to play for her. Three generations of my family enjoyed this chilly opening to the 2017 Redbirds season, the seventh time the Cardinals have stopped for an exhibition game at AutoZone Park on their way from Florida to Missouri. Four Cardinals — Jedd Gyorko, Aledmys Diaz, Jhonny Peralta, and Yadier Molina — homered to delight every mother-in-law in attendance. Less than four months later, Molina — a Memphis catcher way back in 2004 — homered in the major-league All-Star Game, the first Cardinal to do so in 43 years.
Larry Kuzniewski

Riley Ferguson

7) Tigers 66, SMU 45 (November 18) — The 18th-ranked Tigers actually trailed in this
 game, 10-0. Effects of their bye week, apparently. They proceeded to score nine touchdowns (a program-record-tying seven on the ground) to manhandle the Mustangs and clinch the American Athletic Conference’s West Division championship. Memphis quarterback Riley Ferguson tossed two touchdown passes and ran for three more. Anthony Miller had, for him, a ho-hum game: eight catches for 163 yards and two touchdowns. Patrick Taylor ran for 112 yards and a pair of scores, but was merely the Tigers’ second-best running back. Sophomore Darrell Henderson scored on runs of 52 yards and 70 yards on his way to 147 (on just 10 carries). With the win, the 9-1 Tigers jumped to 17th in the AP rankings.

6) North Carolina 75, Kentucky 73 (March 26) — When the 6th-ranked Tar Heels and 5th-ranked Wildcats met in the NCAA tournament’s South Regional final at FedExForum, it wasn’t merely John Calipari’s heroically awkward return to the building he made famous in college hoops circles. This game qualified as a run-through for the upcoming NBA draft. Four of the top 15 picks-to-be took the floor: De’Aaron Fox (5th), Malik Monk (11th), and Bam Adebayo (14th) for Kentucky and Justin Jackson (15th) for North Carolina. (For good measure, another Tar Heel was taken by the Lakers with the 28th pick: Tony Bradley.) And the game lived up to expectations. Five Wildcats scored at least 10 points and a three-pointer by Monk with seven seconds left on the clock appeared to force overtime. But sophomore forward Luke Maye — not NBA-bound, alas — drained a 17-footer from the left wing with less than half a second to play to give Carolina the win and yet another trip to the Final Four (the program’s 20th). Just as they did in 2009, the Tar Heels followed their Memphis net-cutting by winning the national championship.

Next week: The Top Five

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Beyond the Arc Sports

Celtics 102, Grizzlies 93: Five Thoughts

Larry Kuzniewski

This one’s going to be brief, because while there was a lot going on in the Grizzlies’ 102-93 loss to the Boston Celtics last night, none of it is particularly complicated. The Celtics came into town as the best team in the Eastern Conference, albeit one which was struggling a little, having dropped a game in Utah the night before. The Grizzlies found themselves in a big hole in the first half after posting a first quarter in which they only scored 12 points while allowing Boston to score 31. It seemed like Boston was trying to run up a big lead so they could catch their breath and coast the rest of the way using their young guys.

And then. Down only 48-40 at halftime, the Griz uncorked one of their best third quarters of the year, featuring a 21 point outburst from Marc Gasol (including 4-5 from 3 point range) and some of the best defensive sequences the Grizzlies have put forward in months (since they were, y’know, good). Headed into the final frame the Griz had a 2 point lead, but they had to rest Gasol, who had played the entire 3rd and needed to sit for a minute before closing things out…

…and that was all it took. The Celtics opened the 4th quarter on a big run with Gasol on the bench, and the Grizzlies never caught up again. That was the ballgame. There were plenty of things to be encouraged by, but none of them really connected when the game was slipping away. Boston is an elite team, and there’s a reason for that. A week ago I’m not sure the home team would’ve been able to weather the first blow the Celtics delivered, but last night they got it together and challenged. The truth of the matter is that there are moral victories for a team that has struggled this badly. It matters that they almost won. But it doesn’t help the playoff standings.

Five Thoughts

Marc Gasol’s third quarter was reassuring. He can still be dominant when he wants to/gets going. Gasol’s mental state is always precarious, but lately it’s been clear that he’s in his own head, that he’s not letting the game come to him. The Grizzlies Twitter responses to Gasol’s quarter ranged from “why can’t he do this all the time” to “trade him while he can still be this good” to “he’s doing this because he wants to be traded to Boston” and… that’s why Twitter is bad. It’s OK to enjoy things. I enjoyed Gasol’s third quarter, a truly dominant display. He can’t/won’t do it often, but when he does, Gasol’s still an absolute force in games like this.

Larry Kuzniewski

Jarell Martin wasn’t horrible, for the second night in a row. Jarell has been drifting all season, since his first couple of games as a starter way back in October. At times it looked like the Grizzlies made a mistake in keeping him and cutting Rade Zagorac—not because Rade was good but because Jarell’s looked so lost. But last night, building on a decent second half against the Hawks, we saw a little bit of what Jarell can be at the NBA level: everywhere, all the time, using his speed and athleticism, which are crazy for a guy his size, to make plays. His defense still isn’t good, but it’s not so bad he’s unplayable.

After the game I asked interim coach JB Bickerstaff what Martin’s doing differently in these games where he’s playing well. “He’s got to play at that speed the whole time he’s on the floor,” Bickerstaff said. And when he does, obviously, he can contribute against even the best teams in the league.

Mario Chalmers and James Ennis played a lot and didn’t do very much. Ennis was a big part of the rotation before Fizdale moved him out of the starting lineup for Chandler Parsons. Since then, he’s been inconsistent. He didn’t play at all against Atlanta, and last night, in 12 minutes, he just didn’t get anything going. If Ennis has to start to play well, maybe he should just start and never play more than what he did last night.

Chalmers was more concerning. He’s struggled all year, but last night his shot selection was poor, and his passing was just as inconsistent as it’s been all year. At some point, he’s going to become unplayable, and that point may come sooner rather than later, but with Kobi Simmons on a two-way deal, there’s not really anybody else to throw into the backup spot with Conley out. Not anybody currently on the roster, anyway. I’m just not sure “savvy vet” is ever going to be Chalmers’ role. I don’t think that’s who he is, and I don’t think he’s wired to play that way.

Ben McLemore was atrocious. Single game plus/minus is mostly useless because it’s so dependent on lineups. That McLemore was -12 in five minutes feels right even though the stat is unreliable. This guy just isn’t very good, and I don’t think he’ll be better if he goes through a training camp next year. It’s a bad signing and a black hole in the Grizzlies’ wing rotation. He’s making more money than Tyreke Evans. There is no fairness in this world. He’s a nice guy, and he seems well-liked, but he just doesn’t have the court awareness to make the right play.

Larry Kuzniewski

Deyonta Davis, taking the best shot available to him

The Grizzlies have to be willing to take the best shot available. That’s a direct quote from Bickerstaff in the postgame. Guys are passing up shots they should take and taking shots they should pass up. The offense, however long after the Fizdale firing, is still mostly a mess. Guys aren’t moving enough, they’re not sure where to do, and they’re not sure how to play together. Over the last week—since the OKC game, excluding the 4th quarter against Miami—the Griz have started to find a little bit of cohesion on the defensive end, but it’s still not there offensively. One thing at a time, I guess.

Tweet of the Night

Speaking of Jarell Martin’s athleticism, he dunked over (literally over) two dudes last night. This replay doesn’t really do justice to how awesome this was, but you still get a sense for it. He has the tools to be Mr. Putback:

Celtics 102, Grizzlies 93: Five Thoughts

Up Next

The Grizzlies don’t play again until Wednesday, and when they do, it’s… the Warriors. On the road. Should be fine.

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Sports Tiger Blue

Louisville 81, Tigers 72

It may not have been Keith Lee against Milt Wagner, but it was Memphis and Louisville. In Madison Square Garden, no less.

Playing their third of four games in the Gotham Classic, the Tigers battled gallantly against a Cardinal team forecast to be among the nation’s top 20 before Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino was fired under a cloud of scandal. Junior point guard Jeremiah Martin put Memphis up (40-38) with a driving layup to open the second half, but the Cardinals simply had too much Deng Adel and Anas Mahmoud. A pair of Adel three-pointers keyed a 17-2 run that allowed Louisville to seize control and the seven-foot Mahmoud blocked seven shots, outplaying the undersized Tiger frontcourt by himself.

A Martin jumper closed the margin to four points (60-56) with just over eight minutes to play, but Louisville answered with a 9-0 run that put the game out of reach. The Cardinals improve to 8-2 with the win while Memphis falls to 7-3. This was Louisville’s 54th win over a 90-game series with Memphis that dates back to the 1948-49 season. (No future games are currently scheduled between the rivals.)

Quentin Snider led the Cardinals with 18 points while Adel added 15 (all via three-pointer) and V.J. King 16. Martin paced the Tigers with 26 points while Kyvon Davenport added 12 points and seven rebounds. Kareem Brewton scored nine points for Memphis and Mike Parks eight, but neither player was effective in the second half.

The Tigers’ highlight of the game came just before halftime, when senior Jimario Rivers slammed home a one-handed dunk on a lob from Brewton to tie the game at 38. It won’t otherwise be a game for the Rivers highlight film: the forward was not credited with a rebound.

Louisville shot 56 percent from three-point range, hitting 14 of 25 long-range attempts. The Tigers only hit four of 11 three-pointers and shot 45 percent overall.

Memphis returns to FedExForum Wednesday and will host Siena in its fifth of seven home games in December.

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Beyond the Arc Sports

THE GRIZZLIES WON A BASKETBALL GAME

Larry Kuzniewski

I know we’re all tired of hearing and talking about Fake News. This isn’t that. It’s actually a real thing that happened and I saw and I took notes and everything: the Grizzlies, last night, Friday, December 15th, AD 2017, won a game.

I know you might be reluctant to believe it. “How can I be sure you’re not one of them Facebook guys that sells all the powders that make me have power ape mind concentration strength?” you might ask. Or, “Are you sure you’re not an Op being pulled off by the FSB or some other apparatus of the Russian intelligence services, some sort of dezinformatsiya operation designed to trick us into acting against our own self-interest and supporting a team that didn’t actually defeat the Atlanta Hawks, 96-94, in a down-to-the-wire comeback the likes of which the Grizzlies haven’t seen at home in literally months?”

We don’t need a thirty-seven tweet thread to talk through the details of this because (1) that’s what blogs are for, you dummies, we’ve had them for like almost twenty years now and—hear me out—you can post things that are longer than 140 or even 280 characters there but really more importantly (2) it’s that simple. Despite trailing and having to mount several comeback attempts before one took, the Grizzlies scored more points than the Hawks. They won.

The Grizzlies have improved to 9-20 on the season, and as bad as that sounds (and hooboy has it been bad) it’s so much better than the alternative. It’s possible that a loss tonight, to the 6-win Hawks, especially in another close game scenario, could have broken the backs of this team, and killed whatever fighting spirit they still had left. The Miami game proved that spirit was hanging on by the thinnest of threads. They needed this win tonight, and they needed it badly. There’s room for improvement all around, but the one thing they haven’t done since Monday night when they let the Heat roll over them in the fourth quarter is quit, and that’s to their credit.

The offense is mostly still a disaster; it’s different from when Fizdale was the coach but not really better. One notable difference in how the Grizzlies approached the game was the disappearance of the uneven-but-mostly-good James Ennis III from the rotation entirely. Jarell Martin seemed to soak up some of the minutes left behind in his absence, along with a “The Youngs” lineup of Andrew Harrison, Ben McLemore, Dillon Brooks, Martin, and Deyonta Davis that featured prominently in spots where there’s usually at least one veteran on the floor. The rotational changes didn’t help much with execution, but they did help the Grizzlies stay in touch in a game that could have gotten out of hand at several points (and as much as you hate having to admit that about a game against the abysmal Hawks, it is what is is. To quote Le Petit Prince, “on ne sait jamais”).

The defense was uneven through the course of the evening but came through when it mattered, letting the Griz string together several good possessions down the stretch of the third quarter and regain a lead when it looked like before the game might have been slipping away. It’s still not good enough, but given the abysmal defensive awareness from some of the lineups the Grizzlies have to play to have a rotation right now, it’ll do.

So what do we make of this? Did the Grizzlies really win? Was there some sort of designer hallucinogen in my pregame Pepsi that made me trip my way into believing a circumstance which the universe simply will not allow to come to pass? Or is Atlanta just really bad?

I know which one I think it is, even though the former has at times felt much more plausible than the latter. But ultimately, you have to look at the news and decide for yourself whether you think it’s been reported credibly.

Tweet of the Night

In the first quarter, it looked like it really was going to be this bad (or worse) all night.

THE GRIZZLIES WON A BASKETBALL GAME

Fortunately for @MemphisKemp it didn’t stay that bad. All things must pass, that’s George Harrison, right?

Up Next

The best team in the East, the Boston Celtics, fresh off a loss tonight to the Utah Jazz, and who will probably roll into FedExForum tomorrow night out for whatever sort of revenge they can get way with extracting. I don’t expect a win, but who knows—now that they’ve got another win under their belts, maybe the Grizzlies can pull off an improbable upset instead of waiting for the right bad team to roll into town. We shall see.

Categories
Film Features Film/TV

Wonder Wheel

I was a huge Woody Allen fan for years but haven’t watched his movies since Dylan Farrow published her letter detailing memories of abuse. Until I was assigned Wonder Wheel this week, I avoided his films. Having an object of intense identification (whom I aspired to imitate as a writer-filmmaker) suddenly designated for intense ostracism resulted in alienation: You just don’t think about who you formerly idolized. I loved him; now, I associate him with rape.

,p>His later, hackier works are often pale shadows of movies from the height of his talent. (Instead of watching them, I now periodically consume Farrow family testimony.) Any online discussion of new work instantly becomes a battleground over the specific history of his case. His movies lay the groundwork for many other romantic comedies and dramas, and their association with child rape is an incredibly uncomfortable piercing of the pop-culture bubble.

The bubble should pop. Nevertheless, the first two-thirds of Wonder Wheel has the attributes of a dramatic product that is consumable. We open on Mickey (Justin Timberlake) in a 1950s Coney Island lifeguard tower, addressing the audience. He is a playwright who wants to write a great melodrama in the style of Eugene O’Neill

The beach he surveys is fully realized: a million bright bathing suits in Edward Hopper light. We follow Carolina (Juno Temple) and Ginny (Kate Winslet) as they meet there. Ginny is an actress turned waitress, and Carolina is her stepdaughter, on the run from a Mafioso ex-husband, in search of her estranged father, Humpty (Jim Belushi). They go back to Ginny’s house, and it is a proper stagebound set with the eponymous Ferris wheel in the window, always flooded with artificial golden light. The trio emote in their cramped, fake quarters with screaming and monologues, but the framework saves it.

The O’Neill and Tennessee Williams pastiche forgives the tendency of Allen’s characters to state their thoughts and feelings too plainly. Temple and Winslet are pros; Belushi never quite leaves the quotation marks of his character, an abusive husband who wears a wife-beater. Timberlake pulls double duty as both self-proclaimed author of this world and Ginny’s secret lover. He gives one too many speeches commenting on the action, but there is a coldness to his eyes and a willingness to deceive in his delivery that make him interesting.

Justin Timberlake and Kate Winslet (right) star in Woody Allen’s new film Wonder Wheel.

Ginny and Mickey discuss fatal flaws in tragedy. Humpty threatens to hit Ginny. Winslet’s pyromaniac son (Jack Gore), the only openly comedic character, sets things on fire. Ginny dreams of starring in Mickey’s play and running away with him to Bora Bora. As she begins to obsess over him, Winslet does a great soliloquy swathed in unnatural red light. When things get more melodramatic, her scenes are soaked in neon blue, then harsh white.

Unfortunately, the artificiality that sold the beginning of the movie handicaps emotional connection at its end. Simple moments like a birthday party have no real life. The pauses between lines among minor characters there have the rhythm of an amateur stage production where the timing is flat. What made Allen’s delivery as an actor special was the sense he was both doing a comedian’s routine and reacting authentically to the world he had constructed around him. His anger and fear seemed real.

Without Allen, everyone is Margaret Dumont. The only characters that seem alive are the two female leads. Temple mainly fuels the plot, but Winslet has a great American accent that is best used in cutting anger and brutal sarcasm. The movie should have built toward that, turning her self-hatred outward toward those around her. Instead, at the finish line it fumbles a final monologue by heading toward an emotional state similar to Cate Blanchett’s in Blue Jasmine: denial. 

As with everything, Allen’s biography leaks in. Ginny seems to be a stand-in for Mia Farrow, Timberlake for Allen. The movie is arguably a multimillion-dollar protestation of innocence. Last week, Dylan Farrow wrote a second letter, realleging the abuse and demanding Allen’s removal from the world of prestige filmmaking as the only punishment available (after previous contradictory legal episodes). Her question is not of separating the art from the artist, but of public safety. If Allen is a predator in a position of power, he is able to commit crime and avoid both justice and rehabilitation. Such questions make Allen’s art inconsequential to his nonfiction.

Categories
Music Music Features

Acoustic Sunday with Tom Paxton, Three Women and the Truth

Folk music icon and 2009 Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award recipient Tom Paxton says he doesn’t mean to preach. He just tries to hold a mirror up to the world. “I’m not a propagandist. I never have been,” Paxton says. “I just try to reflect the world I see around me.”

Though he has written his share of incendiary folk songs — such as “If the Poor Don’t Matter” and “Lyndon Johnson Told the Nation” — Paxton believes in the importance of seeing the whole spectrum when it comes to songwriting. “I write all kinds of songs,” he says. “I write songs for children. I just finished a love song this afternoon.”

Paxton recently wrapped up a tour in celebration of his 80th birthday — and more than 50 years in the music business as a songwriter, performer, and supporter of music education — from his beginnings as a frequent performer in New York’s Greenwich Village, where in 1962, he recorded his first of more than 60 albums, to his more recent songwriting workshops as part of Warren Wilson College’s Swannanoa Gathering. “I turned 80 on Halloween, and within two weeks, I heard myself described as spry,” Paxton says. “You know you’re old when people describe you as spry.”

Kathy Mattea

Paxton credits Pete Seeger and Seeger’s group the Weavers as being early sources of inspiration. “My model has always been the Weavers. They were the ones who inspired me,” Paxton says. “They didn’t shy away from singing songs about the world around them, but they also sang lullabies and songs of family.” It’s that spirit of unprejudiced observation that fuels Paxton’s songwriting engine. “I’m looking for an idea, and any idea can be a good idea,” Paxton says. “I wrote a song about the firemen on 9/11, who ran up the stairs when everybody else was running down.”

Paxton, along with his band the Don Juans, will play a benefit concert for Indie Memphis, dubbed Acoustic Sunday Live, on December 17th at the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts downtown. “I’m having as much fun now as I’ve ever had,” Paxton says, “and it’s all because I’m hanging out with these two friends from Nashville, John Veznor and Don Henry, who call themselves the Don Juans.” The Acoustic Sunday event seems to represent something of a Tennessee truce between the often differing musical styles of Memphis and Nashville, as many of the performers at the Indie Memphis benefit have made Tennessee’s state capital their home. Also performing will be the Nashville-based Three Women and the Truth: Gretchen Peters, Kathy Mattea, and Mary Gauthier.

Bruce Newman, Indie Memphis board member and host of WEVL’s popular Folk Song Fiesta program, conceived the event as a fund-raiser and a showcase. “I’ve been doing these concerts as fund-raisers for different organizations since maybe the late ’90s,” Newman says. “When I started on the board of Indie Memphis a year ago, I thought that [it] would be a good beneficiary of a fund-raiser.” And Newman says asking Paxton to participate was a no-brainer. “I had him in Memphis for a Woody Guthrie tribute,” Newman says. “Then I had him in Memphis to open the Rose Theater at the University of Memphis.

Mary Gauthier

“I know Mary Gauthier and Gretchen Peters,” Newman says. “I thought it would be cool if we could split the bill up with Tom and then have [them] do this thing called Three Women and the Truth, which is basically songs about what it’s like to be a female in a fairly male-dominated business.”

Describing themselves as “three women, three guitars, and the words, music, and hard-won wisdom of three lifetimes spent in pursuit of the song,” the women can boast multiple Grammy nominations, a CMA Song of the Year, and accolades from No Depression magazine, The New York Times, and Bob Dylan.

“I’m looking forward eagerly to coming back to Memphis,” Paxton says. “I’ll be as spry as ever.”

Tom Paxton and the Don Juans, Three Women and the Truth featuring Gretchen Peters, Kathy Mattea, and Mary Gauthier at the Halloran Centre for Performing Arts, Sunday, December 17th at 7 p.m.

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News News Blog

Public Picks Zoo Parking Lot Plan

Powers Hill Design

Concept Z (above) got the most votes in a recent public survey for a new Memphis Zoo parking lot. The design above shows the ‘ring road’ that designers say will help traffic flow.

Among those surveyed, a clear winner emerged among the three concept plans for a new Memphis Zoo parking lot that is promised to end parking on the Overton Park Greensward.

In early November, local designers at Powers Hill Design submitted the three plans to the advisory group plotting the project and to the public, which had its say on them via an online survey.

All of the plans — Concept X, Concept Y, and Concept Z — added the minimum 415 parking spaces for the zoo mandated by the Memphis City Council. They all also expanded current zoo lots, included a “ring road” to help with traffic flow, and preserve the park’s trees.

None of the plans encroach past the current ridgeline that separates the zoo lot from the Greensward. They all, too, include a green buffer to further separate the 12-acre park field from the parking lot.

The main difference in the plans is the layout of the parking spaces. But they also differ in access points and amenities for pedestrians.

Close to half — 42 percent — of the nearly 4,500 people that took the survey voted for Concept Z. Asked why, those surveyed said they just liked its overall design. That design expands current zoo lots with its southern-most “ring road” reaching almost to the park’s Formal Gardens.

The main difference between Concept Z and the others is that it reconfigures the main zoo lot into a sort of hand fan shape, or maybe the shape of half a wagon wheel. The spaces in the concept roughly face north and south. The other plans keep the familiar bookshelf design with spaces aligned generally east to west.

Concept Z also easily has more pedestrian walkways than the other plans. It has pedestrian entry points from McLean, along Prentiss Place, and an entrance from the Greensward.

Powers Hill Design

Concept Z shown in an aerial view overlaid onto existing park and zoo assets.

The survey feedback will be consumed by the Powers Hill team and it will incorporate it into an updated concept proposal. That concept will be presented to the advisory group and to the public for another round of online feedback.

The survey yielded some other interesting facts.

Most who took it, said they mostly visit the zoo and, to a lesser degree, the park itself, and its anchors like the Levitt Shell and the Brooks Museum of Art. When they visit the zoo, most (95 percent) parked in the main lot, instead of on streets or in the park.

They don’t live around the park and they drive to it (versus walk or bike) when they go. They enter, mostly, at the signaled entrance at Poplar and Tucker.

Most of those surveyed said they want better traffic circulation and better access for cyclists and pedestrians.  They wanted to preserve existing trees and to improve landscaping. They want better lighting, bike racks, better signage, and more.

While most of the respondents were from ZIP codes around the park, voices were heard from all over Memphis, Fayette and Tipton Counties in Tennessee, Marshal, Tate, and DeSoto Counties in Mississippi, and Crittenden County in Arkansas.

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

Left Activists Intrude on Meeting of Shelby County Democrats

Sarah Freels

The Shelby County Democratic Party, reconstituted early this year after being decertified by the state party in

Smith and Strong confront intruders

 2016, endured its first direct attack from a hostile source Thursday night.

Two members of a group styling itself “DNC Fraud Alert” interrupted a meeting of the SCDP’s executive committee at the Cordova Community Center, unfurling a banner denouncing the Democratic National Committee and shouting statements like “The DNC has shown us time and time again that they will lie, cheat, gaslight, and marginalize progressives. It’s time to claim our rightful revolution rather than continue the ping-pong match of corporate overlords! “

They continued shouting through cries from committee members, “You’re out of order.” After being confronted directly by SCDP chair Corey Strong, whose opening remarks they had brought to a halt, and by party sergeant-at-arms Thurston Smith, they finally subsided.

The women were offered speaking time at the end of the meeting but, after resuming their seats at the back of the room, would leave before the meeting concluded. Meanwhile, they had live-streamed a video of their exploit, under the head “Live behind enemy lines lol,” on the Facebook page of one Sarah Freels.

Freels was apparently the one of the two who did most of the talking. Besides the video, she had posted other comments during the meeting. Examples: “… I have many more local events planned so they will get to know me very well LOL….They need to know we are shutting their party down.”

The rather choppy video that was live streamed can be seen here:

Left Activists Intrude on Meeting of Shelby County Democrats

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Politics Politics Beat Blog

GOP Figure Bill Giannini Killed in Car Crash

JB

Bill Giannini

Bill Giannini, a former chairman of both the Shelby County Republican Party and the county Election Commission, was killed in an automobile crash in Decatur County Thursday afternoon, apparently on his way from Nashville to Memphis.

Giannini, who until recently had been deputy commissioner of Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance, was the proprietor of the Resolve Consulting Firm and owner of a Memphis pizza restaurant.

As both GOP chairman and Election Commission chair in Shelby County, Giannini presided over periods of change and controversy.

He had made in clear in numerous recent conversations that he was thinking seriously of running next year for the state Senate seat which federal Judge-designate Mark Norris now occupies. Several friends of Giannini commented on their Facebook pages that he had made plans for seeing them in Memphis this weekend.

The Tennessee Highway Patrol said Giannini was killed on Interstate 40 when his car swerved across the median and struck another vehicle headed the other way. The other motorist was injured but survived.

Giannini’s death recalled another highway tragedy he was involved in almost five years ago exactly, during the Christmas season of 2012, when, as he passed over a rise in I-40 in Shelby County at the Fayette County line, the car he was driving collided with another vehicle that had stopped abruptly because of a chain-reaction accident in front of it.

The car struck by Giannini then struck another stopped vehicle, resulting in a fatality. After a review by the Tennessee Highway Patrol, no one was charged in the accident.

Besides his businesses and his political and governmental work, Giannini was a talented guitarist and had often performed to local audiences, on one memorable occasion in Memphis doing an extended version of the Lynyrd Skynyrd song “Free Bird” in tandem with another musically dexterous political figure, former Arkansas governor and onetime presidential candidate Mike Huckabee.

More news will be reported as it becomes available.