Tag Archive for 'movies'

Dreaming is Nursed in Darkness.

Do you want to see what I have been up to in school this summer? Here is an essay I wrote for Film Appreciation class taught by Stacy Barton.

“A man must dream a long time in order to act with grandeur, and dreaming is nursed in darkness.” —Jean Genet.
To describe City Of Lost Children as dark, sinister or “sick-and-twisted” (Hicks, Deseret News 1996) in the most rudimentary convention is to fly instead of taking a ship, camp in a trailer instead of under the stars or watch a movie when (in some cases) the book proves more insightful. In every visual way possible, this movie is indeed dark. The darkness is not that of formulaic bogeymen and monsters. It is an apocalyptic darkness. Pervading time and underscoring the injustices of violence that average people are quick to utilize with out repercussion, the darkness is barely recognizable as what follows day, which is something that is so easily taken for granted in the here and now. Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro created the depth needed to explain, like a book, the story in it’s entirety. Very few movies are capable of rivaling their printed counterparts. Fewer movies can boast that they epitomize reading between the lines, but as some state “[City of Lost Children] …too rarely engages deeper emotions to score much of a bonus”, the “collection of weirdos” and “in-your-face imagery”(Variety Staff, 1995) is too much for some to go looking for them. Perhaps it is what it is and we should have all peed our pants over it and gone home by now. Or perhaps the message, drenched in the romanticism of newfound friends and a happy ending is so much darker than ghoulish antagonists and rusted metal shrouded in fog.

At the fault of my own ‘judging a book by it’s cover’ method of choosing movies, my first viewing of this film, about five years after its release came at the insistence of many artistic friends. I also can thank my husbands love of sci-fi, as I essentially watched it by proxy. At first glance I was impressed by the quality of it’s aesthetic. The engaging look of an apocalyptic city soaked in an almost silent trickle of water was like looking through goggles in the night to an encrusted coral reef, soaking in each color like a massive sponge. Each orange-red and blue-green, a mesmerizing trademark of the Jeunet-Caro partnership, was blinding me to some of the takes that eventually became poignant in the second and third viewings. Maturity may have also shown me the ability to see what I was blind to before. As a child fast food was like a candy dish. Maybe the sun-bleached drive through menus are as now as old as I am, but I only see brown, orange and yellow. Even the salads are an inedible shade of chartreuse. I’ve opened my eyes. Hamburgers are great every now and again, but sometimes I like my movies to be like a copper fillet of baked salmon with a huckleberry sauce deeper than merlot contrasted with an emerald spinach salad topped with julienned carrots and cabbage that makes a plum blush with envy. The recipe of French cinema is more complex, more natural and consequentially more honest. It’s cause and effect montage sequences, unexpected camera jumps and emphasis on normalcy in lieu of ideology play on the conventions of Hollywood and gives City of Lost Children a classic yet complicated visceral patina that is felt through out the film and echoed in the costume and sets.

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Sturdy Shopping

We got our shopping “bags” tonight!!

We ended up getting them at Target anyway because we checked out the ones at Dollar Tree and they are TINY!! These where like six dollars each, but we figure with all the grocery shopping we do they will get major major usage. Not to mention most of the vendors at the farmer market automatically bag in plastic t-shirt bags for each individual vegetable. Luckily today we were able to cut down on bags by bringing along our little cooler. I had SO much fun there… we weren’t there for too long, but we got a ton of good veggies and the kids got to play a banjo and the banjo guy sun while they played. :) Trinity got another matryoshka doll at one of the trinket vendors(it’s like Saturday market, only the nonfood goods are pretty much made in China dimestore hippie crap) and the lady GAVE jonas a little wooden doggie that is a puzzle that opens.

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Here is a random picture of a horse that we saw on our little exploration trip of Illinois:
Someone's horse

Coraline was a little too much for the kids. Trinity stayed up half the night & Jonas said he had bad dreams and he never does. After the movie he was all zombie and wierded out. They never seem to get that bugged out about scary stuff… but I don’t think they watch too much of it. The last movies I think were a little scary for them was neverending story(the wolf was scary) and Trinity watched Return To Oz with Marina when she was like 3, but I don’t think she remembered it. It scared the ship out of me!! We kept reminding them that Coraline was a. fake & b. had a good ending. I think it would have been different if they watched it in the middle of the day.

Mermaid Graffiti

Watching CNN.
People fighting over the climate bill.
People fighting over the healthcare reform.
Argument #1: The job loss. Idiots.
Argument #2: Wait time for a PCP(100 days). Tell that to people who can’t see a doctor at all.
How do these people have the balls to get on TV and argue about these things.

I went for a LONG walk last night. It was probably still 90° out. At least there was no possibility of burning. I took Chloe, but I forgot water. Not good. Neither of the two gas stations would let me have a cup of water. This town doesn’t have enough fountains. :\

Yesterday we went to the Soulard Farmers Market & The Art Museum & The Jewel Box to take pictures and bum around in the heat. At the the museum had AC. We bought strawberries for 1$. We met an old guy that was nice who sold us the strawberries. We also went down the the levees in St. Louis were it seems like they pretty much allow graffiti. There was at least a mile of graffiti. There was a perfect rendition on "the Lorax" …a movie I have always equaled with this area. :( I don’t think it was an accident that they chose that Suess character. It was SO hot. We drank lots of water.

Into the Wild

We watched Into The Wild by Sean Penn in film class. I want to watch a movie that isn’t depressing! I came home in tears. I relate to Christopher McCandless so much. Between this and Blue Velvet(which was a *great* fathers day movie /end sarcasm) and even Taxi Driver, I just feel drained writing about these and thinking about them in order to write about them.

Insignificant things are bugging me. I guess I will post my essay on this movie someday … stay tuned.

White & Black

On a bored winter day…
DSC07910DSC07944

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Argentina to Illinois

Trinity & Jonas

Ashlee sent us a package with stuff from S. America in it. Trinity got a pink scarf that she used for a head wrap - and looked very glamorous. She also got a little flowered apron with yellow edging that she turned sideways and tied around her arms like it was a bolero. Jonas got an adorable little fuzzy alpaca hat and alpaca socks with little alpaca’s on them. I was explaining to him about alpaca wool and we had just watch a show called “Franny’s Feet” this morning about shearing sheep to make clothes and he was totally into it. :)

Isn’t this beautiful??!!

It is by Laura Pelick, a fellow Illinoisian.

This is proof that when people live outside of their means, they don’t know how to cope when money is scarce. What a sad thing. It sounds like their family is heartbroken, as they should be. I hope that anyone who is going through financial changes right now can inspire themselves and each other to adjust in a more logical way. I mean, you can still have happiness if you don’t have money.

Madoff is a jerk. I keep thinking of the movie Shark Tale when the Will Smith’s fish character is in front of the press and the crazy transient fish announces “I’M HIS FINANCIAL ADVISOR!” … (yes, that crazy) I think there was puppet involved too. It was funny, but the shtuff that people like Madoff pulls is not. :/