Monthly Archives: February 2014

Movie Quote of the Day – Fool For Love, 1985 (dir. Robert Altman)

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May: You have no right to be jealous of me. Not after all the bullshit I’ve been through.
Eddie: We got a pact. Remember that?
May: We haven’t got anything any more.
Eddie: Is that right? How come you’re so excited?
May: I’m not excited!
Eddie: Yeah, you are. You’re beside yourself.
May: You’re drivin’ me crazy, that’s why.
Eddie: You know we’re connected, May. We’ll always be connected. That was decided a long time ago.

Movie Quote of the Day – Cat Ballou, 1965 (dir. Elliot Silverstein)

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Kid Sheleen: Yeah, it’s all over in Dodge. Tombstone, too; Cheyenne, Deadwood, all gone, all dead and gone. Why, the last time I come through Tombstone, the big excitement there was about the new rollerskate rink that they had laid out over the OK Corral. I’ll tell you something else, I used to work for the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show and a Congress of Rough Riders. And I rescued many a stagecoach passengers from road agents and drunkard injuns. . .in the nick of time! Twice a day, three times on Saturday!

A Video For My 2,000th Post

I can’t even believe I’ve posted 1,999 posts – making this number 2,000!. And the next one is 2,001! Too bad I already did 2001: A Space Odyssey for MQOTD. Anyways, enjoy this video featuring a cameo from my cat Mr. Rochester.

Movie Quote of the Day – Factotum, 2005 (dir. Bent Hamer)

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Pickle Factory boss: What do you write?
Henry Chinaski: Mostly short stories. I’m halfway through a novel.
Pickle Factory boss: What’s it about?
Henry Chinaski: Everything.
Pickle Factory boss: You mean, for instance, it’s about. . .cancer?
Henry Chinaski: Yes.
Pickle Factory boss: How about my wife?
Henry Chinaski: She’s in there too.

Movie Quote of the Day – The Rock, 1996 (dir. Michael Bay)

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Agent Paxton: Congratulations, Dr. Goodspeed. You did it.
Dr. Stanley Goodspeed: Thank you, sir.
Agent Paxton: You know, for a while there, I didn’t think you were going to make it. Well done, son. So where’s Mason?
Dr. Stanley Goodspeed: Vaporized. Blown out to sea.
Agent Paxton: Blown out to sea, huh?
Dr. Stanley Goodspeed: Yeah.
Agent Paxton: Poor bastard.
Director Womack: Goodspeed, where’s Mason? Where’s his body? I wanna see that son of a bitch!
Agent Paxton: Vaporized, sir. Excuse me, gentlemen.
Director Womack: What? Vaporized? A body can vaporize?
Dr. Stanley Goodspeed: Oh, yeah! Absolutely, sir.

Reflecting on “La grande bellezza”

“To travel is very useful, it makes the imagination work, the rest is just delusion and pain. Our journey is entirely imaginary, which is its strength.”  Céline, Journey to the End of the Night

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When I wrote about this film for my Favorite Fifteen Films of 2013 post, I was brief and said the film could only be a film. This is part of why I loved it. The visuals, the sumptuousness, the pure cinema of it all.

But, really, the main reason I loved this film was how much I related to the main character Jep. Now, as many of you who follow me know, I’m quite often bored by woe-is-me stories of men. I am an advocate for women’s voices and feel they are underrepresented, misunderstood and often forgotten. So, I can see how saying I related to a story about a 65-year-old man’s existential life crisis could seem bizarre.

But I think some themes are so universal, or maybe so personal, they exist beyond gender specificity.  That’s the case with Jep’s story, at least for me.

In the film, Jep wrote one powerful novel in his late-20s and then gave up on literary glory, settling for a cushy job writing cultural columns and hosting lavish parties. Jep is a bit of a hedonist, but at his core, he’s a man who values sensual experiences, be they visual, aural, literary, edible, sexual, etc – the beauty of living, if you will.

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What the viewer discovers as the film – and Jep – unfolds himself, is that Jep is not suffering because he can’t find that mysterious great beauty (that’s love, folks) – but that he found it when he was young, lost it and has yet to come to terms with his inability to feel anything as deeply again.

I’ve talked briefly about myself on this site since its inception in 2009, which was a year of great changes for me. In the (nearly) five years since, I’ve gone through a lot of other changes – schooling, location, job, etc. But, like Jep, as hard as I try, there’s a moment in my life from 2008 that changed everything about me. A feeling once felt, but (so far) never again. Will I cling to it for another forty years like Jep? I don’t know. Will I ever let go of it for good? Probably not.

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Movie Quote of the Day – Martha Marcy May Marlene, 2011 (dir. Sean Durkin)

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Patrick: You know that death is the most beautiful part of life, right? Death is beautiful because we all fear death. And fear is the most amazing emotion of all because it creates complete awareness. It brings you to now, and it makes you truly present. And when you’re truly present, that’s nirvana. That’s pure love. So death is pure love.

Movie Quote of the Day – Tommy Boy, 1995 (dir. Peter Segal)

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Tommy: Richard? Is this your coat? [laughs]
Richard: Don’t do it.
Tommy: Fat guy in a little coat. Fat guy in a little coat.
Richard: Don’t.
Tommy: [singing] Fat guy in a little coat. / Fat guy in a little coat.
Richard: Take it off, dickhead, I’m serious!
Tommy: Richard! What’s happening? [coat rips] Uh oh!

Female Filmmaker Friday: Making Mr. Right, 1987 (dir. Susan Seidelman)

After I watched Desperately Seeking Susan a few weeks back, multiple people said I needed to follow it up with this little gem of a sci-fi romantic comedy.

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Movie Quote of the Day – Possessed, 1947 (dir. Curtis Bernhardt)

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Louise Howell: Why don’t you love me like that? I’m much nicer than a girder and a lot more interesting.