Anthony Perkins may have been typecast as a result of the success of Psycho, but it’s only because playing disturbed persons seemed to come so naturally to him. I don’t know what the man was like in real life—maybe he was as sweet and kind as Boris Karloff or Peter Cushing. But you can’t deny […]
Author: placelogohere
Movie: The Bug: The Life and Times of the People’s Car (2016)
My wife’s dream car is a fully-restored original Volkswagen Beetle. I also think they’re awesome, but I wouldn’t especially care to own one. Still, they’re easy to anthropomorphize as having friendly, smiling faces. It is that appeal which warrants the 2016 documentary The Bug: The Life and Times of the People’s Car. This well-paced film […]
1UP
It’s a cliché to say every day is a gift, but every day I have lived past July 17th, 2008, has been bonus life. Or, to use the jargon of video games, my “1UP”. If I am still alive when this is published, it will have been 15 years since I was in a hit-and-run […]
Movie: Ninotchka (1939)
“Garbo laughs” Greta Garbo’s persona of being a humorous ice queen was so thoroughly ingrained in the public consciousness of 1939 that all it took to sell a ton of movie tickets was this simple tagline. Fortunately, there is much, much more to Ninotchka than just Garbo’s advertised joviality. This is a one of the […]
Movie: Canadian Bacon (1995)
I have only vacationed in Canada once, taking a brief road trip to Toronto by way of Windsor. We had apparently picked the wrong time to do this, as the country’s relations with the US was at a low, as result of a trade dispute. Having always heard how polite Canucks are, I was stunned […]
Movie: The Peacemaker (1997)
On her last day in a recording studio, Janis Joplin did an acapella number asking the Lord to buy her a Mercedes Benz. She didn’t specify whether the car should be bulletproof, as to better protect George Clooney and Nicole Kidman in 1997’s The Peacemaker while they seem to destroy half of Vienna while trying […]
Movie: Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter?(1957)
Short answer: yes. I suspect the general impression most people have of the 1950’s America is it was hopelessly naïve. Although I wasn’t there to experience it myself, I know there had to be a lot more going on with most people than obsessively looking out for an imagined communist menace while cruising in a […]
Movie: No Way to Treat a Lady (1968)
William Goldman was quite the prolific screenwriter. Most famously known for The Princess Bride, he actually worked across a wide range of genres, authoring such screenplays as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Marathon Man and Misery. So I was intrigued when I noticed he wrote a novel that was adapted into 1968’s No Way […]
Movie: Perfect Blue (1997)
When this 1997 anime appeared on Shudder, I did a double-take. This movie has appeared on my radar occasionally for many years now, but I wasn’t curious enough to learn more about it. I realize this is a bias, but Akira is the only anime I have enjoyed. Yet I found myself intrigued when a […]
Movie: Melvin and Howard (1980)
1980’s Melvin and Howard is based on a true story. There are a couple of things I need to make clear from the beginning. First, there needs to be some clarification that it is based on a true story and not based on hard facts. Second, I am going to delve a bit into the […]
Recipe: The Improved Pancake
You know those instant muffin mixes where you just add milk? The kind that are usually sold in soft-sided packages instead of boxes? Fun fact: you can turn any of those into pancakes just by adding one egg (or the equivalent amount of egg substitute) in addition to the milk. Now I’m going to take […]
Movie: It Couldn’t Happen Here (1987)
There have been bad movies based on concept albums. Then there have been bad “jukebox musical” films, where a narrative thread tries to serve as a throughline for otherwise unrelated songs. But here is a true oddity: It Couldn’t Happen Here takes the tracks from the Pet Shop Boys album Actually and…uh, well, I’m not […]
Movie: The Blancheville Monster (1963)
Nothing happens in the 1963 Italian gothic horror film The Blancheville Monster. What is confusing is how much nothing happens in it. There is a weird inertia to this picture, even if it has a girl returning to her family castle after living in exile, her father who may or may not be deceased (and, […]
Movie: Late Bloomers (2011)
At one point in 2011’s Late Bloomers, one of William Hurt’s sons tell him about the difference between cognitive age and physical age. Apparently, the difference between the two is most people think of themselves, on average, as eight years younger than their physical age. As somebody on the downward slope past the middle of […]
Music: Mutations (Beck, 1998)
As I write this, a huge portion of the Canadian wilderness is engulfed in flames and air currents have carried the smoke south of the 49th parallel, resulting in extremely poor air quality across the northeastern United States. This has resulted in a weird haze that has noticeably changed the strength, and even hue, of […]