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Near Peekskill, New York, United States
My view. No apologies --Shorts, Poems and Photos-Your Comments are always appreciated. (Use with permission)

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

DVDs from the Library - Maudie and Miss Potter

 

In the library there is a bin full of DVDs. One may take up to five and keep them for a week. Don’t forget to return them on time or you will pay a hefty over-due penalty, or worse, they will develop a terminal mold and eat your furniture, flooring and, eventually, your brain. Join me now as I take a look at one…Well two actually!

 “Maudie”-Based on a true story

A film by Asling Walsh

Staring Sally Hawkins and Ethan Hawke

 and...

“Miss Potter”

Written by Richard Maltby Jr.

Directed by Chris Noonan

Staring Renee Zellwegger and Ewan MacGregor

 

 What are the chances that out of a thousand movies to choose from one might inadvertently pick two with amazingly parallel story lines? How is this for coincidence? Both about female artists. Both were real people and their stories were real (with a sprinkling of Hollywood sparkle, of course!). Both lived in times and places where the expression of their artistic bent was not considered particularly acceptable. Both stories incorporate a love interest. And…to top it off I enjoyed both films! Amen!

 I swear I had no idea that what these stories would be about. I picked them off the shelf at the Hobe Sound Library (Where all books must be mysteries and Large Type) after only a cursory examination of the cast. Hawke, Zellwegger and MacGregor being the bait that caught me, though I only half care for any of them. It was several days before I was bored enough to watch the first one a biographical fantasy about Beatrix Potter. She lived out her early years in a straight-laced Victorian home with her over bearing mother and an endearing , father. She drew and painted little bunny rabbits and ducks while cloistered in her upstairs rooms with no prospect expect to end up in an arranged marriage with some lout picked out by her mother. Grim. But Beatrix is nothing if not determined to be something special. 

The movie got off slowly and when the first of many fantastical animations of Beatrix talking to her cartoon creations came up on the screen Elisabeth (my bride) whipped out her cell phone and reverted to Face Book. I stuck with the film. As always I will not give the entire plot away but I will say she breaks free of her mother and her art goes mainstream. She publishes books for children that become wildly popular throughout the world. She becomes wealthy and proceeds to buy a farm and then another adjacent property and another… Her love of Nature abounds and upon her death she has contributed not only lovely children’s books but four thousand acres to the Nature Conservancy.

It was the day before the DVDs were due back at the library that I got ‘round to watching “Maudie”. I didn’t put together the interesting parallels between Maud and Beatrix until well into the story but then it hit me. She is also an artist diddling away in her sister’s house in Nova Scotia. Her sister is every bit the biddy that Beatrix’s mom was and her brother is a creep who wants nothing to do with Sis probably because Maud is different. She seems a little slow and she is deformed and has difficulty walking. Stuck in this restrictive environment, bursting with latent talent, she searches for an outlet. She decides to try housekeeping for a reclusive bachelor/fisherman(Ethan Hawke). Again, I won’t go too deeply into the story but she too has success marketing her primitive paintings. Over time her relationship with Hawke develops and she becomes a sensation in Canada and the U.S. because of her art. 

“Maudie” has a sexual element to the story that “Miss Potter” does not. In fact the latter is marketed for ages 6 through 9 while the former is definitely more adult. But both handle the love relationship topic beautifully. Both capture the essence of artistic drive and creation. Both tell a good story about how the artist comes to grips with the restrictions of the society they live in. Both were worth the watch.

I give them both three Cheap Beers.

 


 

Thursday, December 16, 2021

DVDs from the Library- "Match"

 

DVD’s from the Library-

“Match”

  In the library there is a bin full of DVDs. One may take up to five and keep them for a week. Don’t forget to return them on time or you will pay a hefty over-due penalty, or worse, they will develop a terminal mold and eat your furniture, flooring and, eventually, your brain. Join me now as I take a look at one…

Written and Directed by Stephen Belber

Staring Patrick Stewart, Carla Gugino and Matthew Lillard.

(2014)

 Sure, they still make movies. Netflix makes them and other companies make them to fill the slots in their streaming services. I heard that they just remade "West Side Story" and it is failing at the box office. No surprise there, I didn’t even know anyone went to a real movie theater any more. Besides, remaking a classic has never been easy or made sense to me. There is just such a steep climb to match the genius of the original. The original play "West Side Story" was a remake of Shakespeare's story “Romeo and Juliet”, but the genus of the Broadway  production and music set it apart from a mere copy.

Lately, for me it is rare to watch a movie and really enjoy it. I have been disappointed in so many movies on the streaming TV that I hardly bother any more. So, now that those of you laughing out of the corner of your mouth might understand why I still look for an occasional DVD from the library shelves. Sure I get disappointed by plenty of them too but sometimes I get surprised. This movie-”Match”- was just such a surprise. It was not action packed, in fact it was mostly a melodrama played out between three people. Patrick Stewart plays an aging dancer/teacher and Carla Gugino and Matthew Lillard play a married couple ostensibly interviewing Stewart for her doctoral dissertation. They came from out of town to meet up with Stewart and he is flattered to be the subject of their interview. Stewart comes off blustery and camp and gay and, at first, it is annoying but he is convincingly witty and flamboyant and self-assured. The married couple are serious about their mission and swing along with him but eventually it becomes clear that they have a different agenda. The “plot”, as they say “thickens”. I cannot get deeper into that tangled web as it would ruin the movie for you but let me just say that up until the last moment of this film I was captured! It twists and turns several times taking the viewer on a different tack at each change.

 So what made this film so appealing to me? Everything. The New York landscape as a backdrop, but that might be because I am a sucker for films placed in that city of cities. The photography was superb. Then there was the writing-the best I have encountered in the last hundred films I have waded through. Intelligent, believable dialog that is excessively rare in any thing I have seen in years. It is delivered smartly by all three of the main characters. That brings me to the acting itself. There is not a single misstep anywhere in any of their deliveries or physical performances and it is not an easy dialog either. It is fast paced and if the actors had not punched it up properly the film would not have worked nearly as well. So, the writer/director did a superb job. The setting was engaging. The actors more than earned their keep. In short it was a well made story/film. So if you want an engaging evening’s entertainment see if you can find “Match”. You will be glad you did.

I give this film four cheap beers, my highest award!