by Dean | May 2, 2016 | General

Cover of Kick-Ass
I happened to read the second volume of Kick-Ass (titled Prelude: Hit Girl) before reading the first volume, but it hardly mattered. I was not at all confused by either volume, especially after seeing the movies, although I found myself surprised that the well-liked first flick wasn’t terribly faithful to Mark Millar‘s graphic novel. (But it was faithful enough.)
The story in Kick-Ass, like the artwork, holds my attention, and even more pleasing are the sometimes funny details. As usual, that John Romita Jr.-Tom Palmer-Dean White artwork is hideously bloody, and Millar’s dialogue, etc. is not only anti-liberal but stunningly and aggressively so. A few feminists have probably considered the book sexist, which it isn’t; but, oh, is it ever politically incorrect!
Overwhelmingly rowdy too. I had a good time with it.
by Dean | May 1, 2016 | General

Cover of Anything Else
Re Anything Else (2003):
Apparently Woody Allen believes in themes, but don’t let that fool you. Thematically this caustic, frequently funny, slightly absurdist movie goes almost nowhere.
Amiable Jerry (Jason Biggs), a comedy writer, falls for the unremittingly selfish Amanda (Christina Ricci) and is mentored by an atheistic crank acted by Allen himself. I didn’t buy an iota of it. In addition, there is a great deal of talk and much of it irritating, from Jerry’s fawning babbling to Amanda during their first encounter to Amanda’s remark about the “nihilistic pessimism” in the plays of Sartre and O’Neill. Allen does not do slight absurdism well. He’s too caught up in his own solipsism.
by Dean | Apr 28, 2016 | General

Cover of Excalibur
A man of limited taste, director of Deliverance and Hope and Glory, John Boorman released in 1981 a King Arthur movie, Excalibur. Much of the acting, when it isn’t indifferent (Helen Mirren as Morgana, Paul Geoffrey as Perceval), is loud and showy (Nigel Terry as Arthur). Withal, the film is cheap and exaggerated, with second-rate music.
The scenery is ravishing, however, and there are delicious medieval-fantasy costumes and set design. As well, Excalibur can be intriguing: Nicol Williamson plays Merlin, an amazing magician in Christian England, a man whose day is passing along with the old gods (or simply the dark arts?) But I wish Boorman’s film had something to say; frankly I would rather see Robert Bresson’s Lancelot du Lac, weak as it is.
by Dean | Apr 26, 2016 | General

Cover of Stoner (New York Review Books Classics)
The novel Stoner (1965), by John Williams, chronicles the life of William Stoner, a farm boy sent to college where he falls in love with literature before becoming an adept English professor. This is in the early part of the 20th century, during which Stoner does not enlist to fight in the First World War. Drawn to a woman named Edith, he courts and marries her—one of the worst wives in American literature, and not much of a mother either. The couple have a fragile daughter, Grace. Gradually Stoner enters an affair with an attractive student, but is also deprived of it before long. The passage in which he learns of the student’s feelings for him is superbly written.
An unfortunate fact in Stoner is that an academic career is used to support such sordid realities as Stoner’s ugly marriage and the abetment of a deplorable grad student protected by a vindictive colleague. Human meanness encircles the scholar, although when Grace mentions that things have not been easy for him, he admits, “I suppose I didn’t want them to be.” He says this before he dies of cancer, a disease which merely becomes Stoner’s last enemy, as Edith and the vindictive colleague are his enemies. But none of these enemies does he hate. They create conditions to which he becomes resigned. Over and above, the novel implies that if a man can be resigned to (non-lethal) human enemies, he can be resigned to inevitable death.
The book’s description of the moments before this death is memorable, set forth in what has been considered a lost classic.
by Dean | Apr 24, 2016 | General
I don’t know why Disney keeps remaking The Jungle Book, but at least the current version is a visual dreadnought a lot like a hard-to-forget theme park ride. It’s fun and for the family, albeit some of the animals this time are genuine monsters. King Louie the villainous ape is huge, Kaa is the most stupendous snake you’ve ever seen, and even Shere Khan is not your average-looking ferocious tiger. These are CGI creations for one wickedly scary jungle.
Directed by Jon Favreau.