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    <updated>2008-05-28T16:11:30Z</updated> 
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    <id>tag:vox.com,2006:6p00c2251d8368549d/tags/movies/</id> 
    <subtitle>Neverafter</subtitle>  
    
    <entry>
        <title>Kabe Otoko (The Wall Man)</title>   
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        <published>2008-05-28T16:11:30Z</published>
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 <div>Had a chance to watch <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0778899/" target="_blank">Kabe Otoko</a> today, starring my favorite actor, <a href="http://wiki.d-addicts.com/Sakai_Masato" target="_blank">Sakai Masato</a>.  It&#39;s a horror movie, but more along the lines of creepy rather than scary, which is typical for Japanese horror.<br /><br />The plot involves a reporter, Kyoko, (played by <a href="http://wiki.d-addicts.com/Ono_Mayumi" target="_blank">Ono Mayumi</a>)
who specializes in fluff pieces, reporting on &quot;rumors&quot;. Her boyfriend,
a photographer, Nishina, (played by my boy Sakai Masato) has a
nightmare about her investigating an urban legend called &quot;The Wall
Man&quot;. Strangely enough, the next day, a letter arrives at her office
telling her about the legend, a letter with an address, but no name.<br /><br />BEWARE: SPOILERS BEYOND THIS POINT!!!<br /><br /><a name="cutid1"></a><br /><br />Kyoko
decides that The Wall Man would make a good story for her show, so she
goes to the address on the letter, only to find that it&#39;s the basement
of an abandoned shopping center. The place is creepy, but she finds
nothing substantial. However, she keeps running into people who have
heard the legend and have leads to follow, so she continues with the
story.<br /><br />In the meantime, her boyfriend Nishina has become
intrigued with the Wall Man story. He picks up the theme of walls for
his next photography exhibition. His previous one, Inner/Outer, was all
pictures of faces and hands. In a flashback, it is revealed that the
Inner/Outer exhibition is where he met Kyoko. She was there as a
reporter, and he took pictures of her. He was especially drawn to her
right hand, which was scarred. Walls, Nishina thinks, are neither
&quot;inner&quot; or &quot;outer&quot;, but somewhere in between.<br /><br />As Kyoko
investigates the Wall Man, Nishina takes pictures of walls and examines
them for traces of the Wall Man. Kyoko, however, becomes afraid. The
story that she has reported has set off a media frenzy. The few real
leads that she receives are disturbing. A man is supposedly injured by
the Wall Man when his apartment wall collapses. The taxi driver who
gives her the man&#39;s address is later injured in a car wreck. And
Nishina is beginning to act very strangely.<br /><br />Determined to
contact the Wall Man, Nishina gives up taking photographs and puts up
post-its of alphabets all over his walls, not only kana (the phonetic
characters of the Japanese language), but Roman and Greek letters as
well. To each letter, he attaches a bell. Kyoko leaves him, and he
spends all his time in his room, waiting to hear back from the Wall Man.<br /><br />It
turns out that the original letter about the Wall Man was a hoax, made
up by one of the cameramen who works for Kyoko. But the legend has
taken on a life of its own now. A disturbed fan goes to the basement
where Kyoko originally searched for the Wall Man and threatens suicide
if she won&#39;t speak to him. She goes there, but gets no answers as the
man is captured by the police as they talk. Later, she admits to her
cameraman that she was relieved that the crazy man in the basement
wasn&#39;t Nishina.<br /><br />The cameraman (who was the guy who started the
hoax) is on the verge of confessing, but then asks if Kyoko wants him
to go with her to check on Nishina. They go, and find him laying on the
floor, his head bashed into the wall. While the cameraman goes to get
help, the bells on the wall start ringing. The letters spell out that
Nishina is already dead, and when Kyoko asks who is ringing the bells,
the answer is the Wall Man.<br /><br />And then there is the trick ending,
but it&#39;s difficult to explain. Suffice to say, the urban legend dies
down, but the Wall Man remains, and Nishina is waiting for Kyoko to
join him.<br /><br /><br /><br />Again, creepy rather than scary, but a very
interesting movie. The director managed to make ordinary walls seem
ominous. The acting was great and the script was rather deep for a
horror movie. There was a lot of examination of the concept of
in-between and media. Urban legends have been used for fodder of horror
movies before, but rarely in such a thoughtful way. In some ways, Kabe
Otoko reminded me of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103919/" target="_blank">Candyman</a>, although not quite as gory.</div>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Camelot and Hula</title>   
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        <published>2008-05-09T16:36:32Z</published>
        <updated>2008-05-09T16:36:32Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Yesterday seemed to be PBS day in our house.&#160; There were a couple of interesting shows that I recorded and watched.</p><p><a name="cutid1"></a></p><p>PBS&#39;s Live from Lincoln Center had a performance of <a href="http://www.pbs.org/livefromlincolncenter/" target="_blank">Camelot</a>,
one of my favorite musicals.&#160; Gabriel Byrne played King Arthur and a
broadway singer named Marin Mazzie played Guenevere.&#160; Lancelot was
played by baritone Nathan Gunn.&#160; I wish I could say this was a good
performance, but it was horribly mediocre, the sort of thing I would
expect to see here in Dubuque, and certainly far below New York
standards.&#160; Usually, I like Gabriel Byrne, but he was horribly miscast
in this role.&#160; The actress playing Guenevere had a lovely voice, but
she flubbed her lines a couple of times.&#160; I mean literally, sang the
wrong words and had to catch herself.&#160; WTF?&#160; I might expect that in a
local small-town production, but certainly not from something in New
York!&#160; I was very impressed with <a href="http://www.nathangunn.com/" target="_blank">Nathan Gunn</a>,
however.&#160; First time I&#39;ve seen the guy (looks like he tends to focus on
opera, which I tend to ignore).&#160; Gorgeous man, incredible voice.&#160; I
guess it helps that a strong baritone tends to make me weak in the
knees. *fans self*</p><p>Since this performance was not a theatrical
run (it was more to showcase the orchestra), there wasn&#39;t much effort
put into the costumes and they looked cheesy.&#160; The dancers weren&#39;t bad,
but the chorus was pretty weak.&#160; That may not have been their fault,
however--usually in musicals, the orchestra is located in a pit below
the stage, but since this was the New York Philharmonic, they were
placed behind the singers and often overpowered them.&#160; Christopher
Lloyd put in an appearance as King Pellinore and almost stole the
show--it&#39;s the first time I&#39;ve actually seen the role of Pellinore
being funny, as opposed to tedious.</p><p>Honestly, I was horribly
disappointed in this performance.&#160; I really was looking forward to
seeing it and to see it so badly done...le sigh.&#160; Well, at least it was
on TV and I hadn&#39;t spent however much a ticket to Lincoln Center
costs.&#160; Not that I&#39;d be able to travel to New York anyway. :-P</p><p>A
bit of history here:&#160; I&#39;m not sure when I first became aware of the
King Arthur legend.&#160; I already knew about it in elementary school, so
I&#39;m assuming that it was in some storybook that my parents read to me
as a very young child.&#160; It was one of my favorite stories.&#160; I do
remember the first time I heard Camelot, though.&#160; I saw the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Camelot-Original-Broadway-Frederick-Loewe/dp/B000007OHW/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&amp;s=music&amp;qid=1210343039&amp;sr=8-2" target="_blank">Broadway Cast recording</a>
(this is back in the days of vinyl) at the library when I was in 3rd
grade and checked it out.&#160; This is the one with Richard Burton, Julie
Andrews and Robert Goulet.&#160; I absolutely fell in love with it, and
begged my parents for a copy of the album, which I later got for Xmas.&#160;
I wore it out, I listened to it so much.&#160; (Incidently, I also managed
to get my brother hooked on the show because he&#39;d heard me playing the
songs so often.)&#160; </p><p>When I was in junior high school, Richard
Burton revived the role and my father managed to get us tickets.&#160; They
weren&#39;t great seats (my dad, as ever, got the cheapest ones), but it
was magical all the same.&#160; I had caught the movie version (with Richard
Harris and Vanessa Redgrave) on tv at some point in the 1970s.&#160;
Gorgeous (albiet historically inaccurate) costumes, but the production
suffered from Redgrave&#39;s inability to sing and some of the supporting
cast&#39;s bad acting.&#160; Harris as Arthur was fine, and actually Franco Nero
did a pretty good job as Lancelot, considering he couldn&#39;t speak
English at the time and learned his lines phonetically.&#160; Later, I saw a
few local productions of the play.&#160; If someone is doing a version of
Camelot, I&#39;ll usually make an effort to go see it.</p><p>And every
single one of these productions was far superior to the dreck the
Lincoln Center put out in their version.&#160; That&#39;s saying a lot.</p><p></p><p>The PBS show Independent Lens showed an interesting movie recently: <a href="http://www.lehuafilms.com/nakamalei.html" target="_blank">Na Kamalei: The Men of Hula</a>, following the story of one man and his hula school.&#160; There&#39;s a preview <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Wcum44YRM4" target="_blank">here on youtube</a> if you are curious.&#160; Ya&#39;ll know me: I can&#39;t resist Hawaii.&#160; The Islands are Calling!</p><p><a name="cutid2"></a></p><p>What
I found most interesting about this documentary was the juxtaposition
of what is perceived as a &quot;feminine&quot; dance being performed by men.&#160;
Actually, a version of hula was always danced by men, but because of
all the hip-swaying, it was perceived as lewd and was almost stomped
out when the white settlers came to the islands in the 19th century.&#160;
The tradition was kept among the women (I guess women swaying their
hips isn&#39;t lewd at all, huh?), but very few men got involved until
there was a great revival of Hawaiian culture during the 1970&#39;s.&#160; </p><p>Even
now, there is a stigma attached to men&#39;s hula.&#160; It was interesting to
see one of the dancers sitting down to dinner with his family, and
hearing from his kids how they were teased at school because their
father &quot;must be gay&quot; to be dancing hula.&#160; The man actually broke out in
tears when his oldest son (now grown) confessed that he was very proud
of the way his father danced.&#160; Several of the other dancers mentioned
their initial resistance to learning hula because of the &quot;gay&quot; factor,
but then, when they got into it, they got hooked.</p><p>When you see
these men dance, &quot;feminine&quot; is the last word that comes to mind.&#160; They
are extremely masculine, and also graceful, and yes, beautiful.</p><p>The
film follows a particular school as they prepare for an annual dance
competition.&#160; This school, one of the older ones, has a company of men
who are mostly middle-age (although there were a couple of younger men
in the bunch).&#160; They don&#39;t perform competition that often because of
the intensity--(IIRC, they only show up to this competition once every
ten years).&#160; There was some chest-beating going on about them being
old--a lot of the groups they would be competing against were comprised
of much younger men.&#160; But they go on and work to get in the contest
anyway.</p><p>The film was very touching.&#160; The watcher really gets to
care about these everyday men who are taking time from their lives to
preserve a part of their native tradition.&#160; (And yes, as always, there
is one &quot;white guy gone native&quot;--in this case, a man from Connecticut
who came to Hawaii to visit when he was young, got hooked on the
culture, and now teaches Hawaiian Studies at the University there.&#160; He
blends in, though.)</p><p>Well-worth watching, if you get a chance.&#160; Check the local listings.&#160; There is also a version of the film out on DVD. </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Black Sheep</title>   
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        <published>2007-10-13T15:53:47Z</published>
        <updated>2007-10-30T15:54:06Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Okay, <span class="ljuser" style="white-space: nowrap;"></span>I finally got ahold of the <a href="http://www.blacksheep-themovie.com/" target="_blank">Black Sheep</a> DVD and watched this cinematic masterpiece from the wilds of New Zealand.</p><p>It
was fantastic.&#160; Freakin&#39; hilarious, with a ton of gore.&#160; (Hint to my
readers: don&#39;t watch this movie while eating.&#160; Also: may put you off
sheep forever.)</p><p>The plot (such as it is) centers around Henry,
the psychologically-damaged son of a sheep farmer who is returning home
in order to get some closure, as well as sell his half of the family
spread to his <del>troubled and evil</del> older brother, Angus.&#160; Angus
has been a bad boy, though, dabbling in genetic experimentation, and
something has gone horribly, horribly wrong.&#160; Meanwhile, Grant and
Experience, two radical greenies, decide to raid the farm in order to
take pictures of its super-secret genetic lab.&#160; While there, Grant
decides to steal some evidence, but gets infected himself.</p><p>It
all goes downhill from there.&#160; Blood!&#160; Gore!!&#160; Lots and lots (and lots)
of sheeps!&#160; And some of the funniest lines of dialogue that I&#39;ve heard
in years.</p><p>Experience:&#160; Oh My God!!<br />Henry: What, what?<br />Experience: The Feng Shui in here is terrible!</p><p>Question, though: are there just a lot of hot men in New Zealand, or
is it just that New Zealand happens to have a lot of really
good-looking male actors?&#160; Because, dayum, there were some fine fellas
in that cast, when they weren&#39;t being turned into were-sheep!&#160; IIRC, <a href="http://www.samneill.com/" target="_blank">Sam Neill</a> is a Kiwi actor as well, isn&#39;t he?&#160; I remember falling in love when him as a girl when I first saw <a href="http://www.amazon.com/My-Brilliant-Career-Judy-Davis/dp/B0008GGN9I" target="_blank">My Brilliant Career</a> and the <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Ivanhoe-James-Mason/dp/0800105893/ref=tag_dpp_lp2_edpp_ttl_in/002-6611800-4776851" target="_blank">1982 BBC Version of Ivanhoe</a>.</p><p>I
admit, I closed my eyes during a lot of the gory scenes (although I saw
them later during the &quot;Making Of&quot; featurette, but that isn&#39;t so bad).&#160;
Black Sheep is an excellent movie, especially if you have a wicked
sense of humor.&#160; The DVD has a lot of extras, too, making it well worth
the price.&#160; Check it out! </p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>Sukiyaki Western Django</title>   
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        <published>2007-06-29T01:24:09Z</published>
        <updated>2007-08-27T09:59:30Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Could this be revenge for Hollywood&#39;s godawful <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memoirs_of_a_Geisha_(film)" target="_blank">Memoirs of a Geisha</a>?</p><p><a href="http://www.sonypictures.jp/movies/sukiyakiwesterndjango/index.html" target="_blank">Sukiyaki Western Django</a> is being released in Japan this September. I <em>must see this movie</em>.&#160; Genji vs. Heike in a balls-to-the-wall shoot-it-up Wild West extravaganza!&#160; And it&#39;s in English.&#160; Kinda.&#160; Not all the actors could speak English, so they got a dialect coach out from Hollywood to teach it to them phonetically.&#160; Which might explain the misuse of the word &quot;Ain&#39;t&quot; in the second trailer.&#160; Quentin Tarentino, who is always up for a good time, has a small guest-starring role.&#160; One can only hope that he&#39;s speaking Japanese.</p><p>The director is <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Takashi_Miike" target="_blank">Miike Takashi</a>, best known in America for ultra-violent films like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichi_the_Killer" target="_blank">Ichi the Killer</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audition_(1999_film)" target="_blank">Audition</a>.&#160; He has, however, made other films in different genres, so Sukiyaki Western Django may not be a splatterlicious gore-fest, although odds are good there will be a lot of gunslinging because, duh, it&#39;s a western.</p><p>That enka theme song looks to be a classic, although to my mind nothing can match <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frankie_Laine" target="_blank">Frankie Laine</a>&#39;s rendition of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZdwQXRAmemY" target="_blank">Blazing Saddles</a>.&#160; (Then again, that theme song is so funny because Mel Brooks forgot to tell Mr. Laine that the movie was a spoof.)</p><p>There are two trailers out on Youtube for Sukiyaki Western Django: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLam3sP29VY" target="_blank">here</a> and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7xky1xU0QA&amp;mode=related&amp;search=" target="_blank">here</a>.&#160; One can only hope that Tarentino uses his considerable influence to have the movie released here in America.</p><p>PS: Looks like my boy <a href="http://wiki.d-addicts.com/Sakai_Masato" target="_blank">Sakai Masato</a> is in it, albeit in a minor role.</p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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    <entry>
        <title>The Mansomest Man of Them All</title>   
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        <published>2007-04-19T08:04:55Z</published>
        <updated>2007-08-27T09:59:31Z</updated>
    
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        <p>Note to self: I really need to make myself a &quot;Music&quot; icon at some point.&#160; </p><p>In the battle against melancholy, there are few weapons that equal the effectiveness of Disney films.&#160; Today, it was Disney&#39;s 1997 classic <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hercules_(1997_film)" target="_blank">Hercules</a> that I turned to for solace.</p><p>I&#39;ll be the first to admit that Hercules was not one of the best animated films of Disney&#39;s late-20th-century renaissance.&#160; Other films like Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, and Hunchback of Notre Dame far surpass the film, both in animation quality, acting and musical score.&#160; But nevertheless, I <em>like</em> Hercules.&#160; From the odd character designs that reminded one of Greek vases, to those gospel-singing Muses, to James Woods&#39; sardonic performance as Hades, this quirky little film is a whole lotta fun, even if the story they tell has very little resemblense to the actual Hercules myth.&#160; (But that&#39;s okay, because, let&#39;s face it, the mythical Herc was somewhat of a brute.)</p><p>But by far, the thing I love most about this movie is the song <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_the_Distance" target="_blank">&quot;Go the Distance&quot;</a>, which ended up being a huge hit for singer <a href="http://www.michaelbolton.com/" target="_blank">Michael Bolton</a>, who BTW&#160; actually looks much, much better with his hair cut short than with that super-mullet that he sported through much of the 1980s &amp; 90s.&#160; The song got played to death on the radio during the late 1990s (so many people detest it), but I couldn&#39;t get enough of it.&#160; It always made my heart soar to listen to it, especially near the end when that unexpected fanfare hits.</p><p>I was surfing YouTube, trying to see if anyone had posted a clip from the Japanese version of the movie, but had no luck.&#160; However, I did run across this <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKkG7x5ZjB8" target="_blank">incredible rendition of the song</a>, which was from a Malaysian TV idol show (I think?).&#160; Couldn&#39;t place the language of the singers&#39; names--one sounded Chinese, the other two Muslim?&#160; Anyway, dang, those three could really diva!</p><p>Now I have to stop trawling because <span class="ljuser" style="white-space: nowrap;"><a href="http://aota.livejournal.com/profile"><img alt="[info]" height="17" src="http://stat.livejournal.com/img/userinfo.gif" style="vertical-align: bottom; border: 0;" width="17" /></a><a href="http://aota.livejournal.com/"><strong>aota</strong></a></span> is getting really sick of hearing this song, even though he&#39;s in the next room. :-P</p><p> Also, for those of you who haven&#39;t taken a gander at <span class="ljuser" style="white-space: nowrap;"><a href="http://cleolinda.livejournal.com/profile"><img alt="[info]" height="17" src="http://stat.livejournal.com/img/userinfo.gif" style="vertical-align: bottom; border: 0;" width="17" /></a><a href="http://cleolinda.livejournal.com/"><strong>cleolinda</strong></a></span>&#39;s latest parody of the movie <a href="http://300themovie.warnerbros.com/" target="_blank">300</a> (from which I shameless stole the title of this post), please hie yourselves <a href="http://community.livejournal.com/m15m/14864.html#cutid1" target="_blank">hither</a> and enjoy.&#160; No, you don&#39;t need to have seen the movie to appreciate it, although you might want to check out <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZm52UrkDpA" target="_blank">the preview</a> so you know what the characters look like.</p>   <p style="clear:both;"> 
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