Big Screen: Wanted.

Sooooo much fun. Completely exhilarating! Great trip to the movie theater. Very different from Iron Man, but just as completely what I am looking for in an action movie. My two favorite movies of the year so far. No fucking doubt about it.

I LOVED IT. Dad LOVED it. Nipper loved it. Michelle liked but didn’t love it. The Chicago Reader hated it (prompting this response from Michelle: Damn! I liked it a little more than that dude. Who apparently doesn’t understand the difference between REALITY and a FUCKING MOVIE.).

Where it suffers in comparison with Iron Man:

  • The underlying mythology isn’t as strong. With Iron Man, it’s very clear why he decides to do what he does, what’s driving him, it makes sense in a very cause-and-effect way. When he sits in front of the press and says “somehow we’ve become comfortable with zero accountability” it’s like a jolt to your (any actual smart, responsible person’s) heart, a direct attack on the fucked up situation of today. With Wanted, it’s more smoke and mirrors. A very “In the Name of the Rose” or “DaVinci Code” type background. I mean, that’s fine, except that no one ever questions “who’s running the loom?” No one ever wonders who’s in the background pushing the buttons? The assassins committed to this society BELIEVE the loom is doing it all on its own? (Although in other ways, this does work for me. That whole “secret society buzz” has a very comic book feel to it, so I think it works in the movie, I just think it doesn’t work AS WELL as Iron Man’s themes.)
  • The situation isn’t as personal, or it technically should be, but it’s not presented that way. While RDJ’s character in Iron Man is in many ways someone living a life who just doesn’t care, when he does begin to care, it’s very personal. His name on the weapons, his legacy, etc. In Wanted, McAvoy sort of falls into things with an extreme lack of knowing what’s really going on. Things eventually become personal, but not at first, and they become personal via lies and misinformation that creates a kind of distance from any emotional effect. In other words: Iron Man becomes a MORAL QUEST. Wanted is about a gang of slaughterers. Fun, but kinda sick. Iron Man engages you on another dimension. As my Dad put it: It’s probably not good to kill people you don’t even know.
  • The Hero’s Glamour Factor. While RDJ’s character may not be on the moral highground to begin with, he’s not a frustrated loser working a shithole job and getting blindsided by his best friend either. He’s a little easier to fall in love with in that “beginning of the movie, suck you in, make you want to watch him” way. Much as I love Bright Abbott dearly, oh, man, I hated seeing him be the swindler of McAvoy.

Where it SHINES in comparison to Iron Man!!:

  • Hello, four words: Female Fucking Action Hero. Jolie* is just as much a focus as McAvoy, or any of the other assassins (even moreso). As Dad points out, “she is a MAJOR part of this movie, her part is outstanding and she’s outstanding in it.” Whereas in Iron Man while Gwyneth Paltrow is actually good (a rare enjoyment of her on my part), and has great chemistry with RDJ, her role is soooooo sidelines. And very retro, the female “secretary” role, even with sass is STILL the female secretary role. I mean, she goes to the final confrontation in 5-inch spiked heels to stand on the sidelines and shriek in distress. She’s good when she’s in it but she’s so auxiliary.
  • The Sets, particularly the Factory. While they make sense in the storyline, Iron Man’s modern office buildings and desert caves don’t really do as much for me as the sets in Wanted (although RDJ’s house is pretty cool). The textile mill/factory is really majestic in a way, I LOVED all the car chases through the El structures and the stuff on the El itself (I love you, Chicago! You’re so pretty!). And the train scenes at the end with his dad? And when Jolie drives her car onto it! VERY COOL!

Where both movies are GREAT:

  • Effects, effects, exhilarating effects. Even my Dad who is not generally fan of CGI bullet fights (Peckinpah and Walter Hill did it better, OLD SCHOOL, and he will happily talk your ear off about it), even he loved the “fight” scenes in Wanted. How about the final showdown at the textile mill, where McAvoy is picking up other people’s weapons as his way to reload? AWESOME!
  • Wit, sarcasm, banter. Both movies have enough of this to be interesting BEYOND the effects and the drama and the Super Heroness of it all. Comic relief so you don’t become bogged down by the horribleness of some of it.
  • The “training” scenes. RDJ in his laboratory with his robot helpers and McAvoy gettin’ schooled by Jolie. Like the scene where he’s trying to grab the shuttle? And then when he finally does? All done with nice touches of humor.

I could go on (and on…) but believe it or not, I actually have something else to do right now. Shocking!

Need I even say it? Highly recommended. (BOTH)

*And if you enjoy Jolie in this, I recommend you check out Mr. & Mrs. Smith (which I LOVED a ridiculous amount!) as well as the two Tomb Raider movies, because she is great in these mixes of physicality/sass/sex/etc.

Recommending Random Sampler Singles

For those three of you who are always asking me for new singles to check out…HERE YA GO.

Paste 39:

  • “Love During Wartime” The Main Drag
  • “Sweet to Mend” Heirloom Projector
  • “Ships” Tyler Ramsey”
  • “Fine Line” Little Big Town
  • “The Story of Benjamin Darling Part 1” State Radio
  • “Coat Check Dream Song” (Live version) Bright Eyes

Paste 40:

  • “California Girls” The Magnetic Fields (another song of theirs is also a favorite this summer)
  • “Gravedigger” Willie Nelson
  • “Shout” De Novo Dahl
  • “Angel” Joe Rathbone
  • “Hot Romance” Parlour Steps
  • “Sing Along” Virginia Coalition (I’ve been loving this song for awhile now)
  • “Ghosts of Goodbye” Ford Turrell
  • “Goodnight” Zox

Paste 41:

  • “The Silence Between Us” Bob Mould
  • “Strawberry Street” Lili Hadyn
  • “Bye Bye Bye” Plants and Animals
  • “Punches” by Collin Herring
  • “Meet Me by the River” Matthew Ryan vs. the Silver State
  • “I Got a Thing for You” Jim Bianco
  • “Changing Your Mind” Bob Schneider
  • “Goodnight Girl” The Nadas
  • “Old Song” AM

Paste 42:

  • “Sing Again” Chris Walla
  • “Buildings & Mountains” The Republic Tigers
  • “Nobody Knows” Keaton Simons
  • “Antarctica” The Weepies
  • “Rebel Side of Heaven” Langhorne Slim
  • “Shooting Star and the Ambulance” Pete Francis
  • “This Girl” Jordan Zevon
  • “I Keep Faith” Billy Bragg
  • “Better Things” South
  • “She Held My Hand” Steven Delopoulos

Paste 43:

  • “Graveyard Girl” M83
  • “Be With Me” Foy Vance
  • “My Only Offer” Mates of State
  • “Get on With It” Val Emmich
  • “Mystery” Ashleigh Flynn
  • “Late Last Night” Robby Hecht
  • “Standing Bird” Love Psychedelico
  • “Jessi Jane” The Whipsaws

And if you need reference points*, we’ve got:
“Right Hand on My Heart” The Whigs …sounds like… Springsteen! “Ghosts of Goodbye”

Ford Turrell …sounds like… Ryan Adams!

“Bye Bye Bye” Plants and Animals …sounds like… Arcade Fire! Or Ravens & Chimes!

“I Got a Thing for You” Jim Bianco …sounds like… Joe Cocker! Or Tom Waits!

“Old Song” AM …sounds like… Josh Rouse!

“Nobody Knows” Keaton Simons …sounds SASSY like… Jason Mraz!

“Open Fire” Sara Mac Band …sounds like… The Dixie Chicks!

“Standing Bird” Love Psychedelico …sounds A BIT like… The Dixie Chicks as well!

“Jessie Jane” The Whipsaws …sounds like… Lynyrd Skynrd!

* Note that …sounds like… is a very loose term that may mean actually SOUNDS LIKE or may mean rather mean “reminds me (and no one else) of”.

Fiction: Lush Life, by Richard Price

A bday present from Carla who must’ve seen me mention it here. 😉

Price does such a good job of sucking you into each character’s point of view. I kept changing who I was rooting for / who I thought was guilty / who deserved a serious smackdown. He is also just brilliant at maintaining the main plotline while also delving into all the little conflicts going on in the substories around it. Every character, every story, every little grouping of people is fully fleshed out and palpably human.

And the dialogue? Holy crap, no wonder they make this guy’s books into movies. The dialogue is just spot-on in every scene.

Combine this great book with Minty’s recent Coney Island and Mermaid Parade photos and I was missing NYC something fierce for a week there.

Fiction: Life Class, by Pat Barker

I really, really canNOT understand the reviews for this book: all of which seem to compare it unfavorably to her earlier Regeneration trilogy and some of which I just find ludicrous (“Tellingly, many critics mentioned as their favorite character one with little more than a walk-on—the real-life artist, teacher, and surgeon Henry Tonks, whom they hope to see more of in a sequel“. What? NO.).

I didn’t think the first half of the book was “slow” as so many have said / I thought the first half was about a bunch of very unhappy people, some of whom are actually happier when the war comes (second half) because it gives their life some direction they hadn’t seemed to be able to find before it. Life does move slower when you’re unhappy, don’t you know.

I loved the descriptions of the art in this book; I could *almost* see the paintings in my mind and I really wish most of them existed. (Similar to how I felt about the paintings in Siri Hustvedt’s “What I Loved”.)

I found it moving and insightful and while it does continue to crack me up that so many contemporary British writers are often to be found writing about WWI and II (because there just haven’t been any conflicts in the world since then, right?) in a way you don’t find quite as often on this side of the pond, I think Pat Barker is (and continues to be) one of the best.

Fiction: The Farther Shore, by Matthew Eck

I’ll go back to my initial reaction: Welcome to the new generation of war novelists. Tactile and gritty and completely engrossing.

A bombed-out Middle Eastern city. An isolated military unit. Sand and desert winds and sweat and dehydration and confusion. The byplay between fear and confidence.

While it is what every good war novel is…it is also something of its own. Highly recommended.

In Concert: Sea Wolf

This show was sooooooooooooo good. Dramatic and intense and thick and layered. Cascades of sound. LOVED it. I listened to almost nothing but this album all of December and most of January; I was so happy to hear it live.

Other than the 6’2″ dude in front of us wiping out (passed out? fell? who knows?) — and causing me to fear for my safety in my summer dress up chunky high sandals (like if he falls any closer to me, I might break an ankle trying to get out of his way!) — and then being carried out by his friends in a big commotion it was a great night.

And bonus: the hilarious byplay between the tattooed, muscle-y lead guitarist (as opposed to lead vocalist) and the skinny, 12-teen bassist. For ex., every time the bassist had to shake the tambourine, the lead guitarist would keep looking over and smirking at him like “Ha ha young’un’, you’re stuck with the tambourine!” I thought I might be imagining the whole thing but then TL leaned over and said “Are you catching the teasing going on up there?” Oh yeah, it made them even cuter.

Fiction: War with the Newts, by Karel Capek

Our June challenge book.

Really sharp political/societal commentary. First section is really rollicking fun. Second and third, a bit darker. Sometimes very sad.

Poignantly predictable, in a way, given world history now in 2008, but probably less predictable and more predictive in its time (first published in 1936).

Loved it.

By the way, Capek is the dude who came up with (created? originated? whateva!) the word “Robot” (in his play R.U.R.). This is also the first book to cause some random stranger to come up and talk to me on public transportation IN MY LIFE and given that I have 5 yrs in Chitown and 13 yrs in NYC reading on public transit every work day, that’s saying something.

In Concert: The Long Blondes

per my drunken Flickr review:

Kicked Ass.
Openers sucked.
Venue was empty.
Crowd was weird.
Band Rocked.

Highly recommended that you see them live. Some songs almost a combination of Berlin (swoon) and early Madonna. Really great. Would love to see them again with a bigger crowd.