Duff Does Live Music 2008

  • The Sea and the Cake (12/31)
  • The Chandeliers (opener) (12/31)
  • My Morning Jacket (12/27)
  • Fujiya & Myagi (2nd x)(10/25)
  • Catie Curtis (10/4)
  • Ruthie Foster (opener) (10/4)
  • Liam Finn (& Eliza Jane) (10/2)
  • The Veils (opener) (10/2)
  • Johnny Flynn and the Sussex Wit (9/20)
  • Laura Marling (9/20)
  • Mumford and Sons (9/20)
  • We/Or/Me (9/20)
  • Band of Horses (Monolith)(9/14)
  • The Kills (2nd x)(Monolith)(9/14)
  • The Avett Brothers (Monolith)(9/14)
  • Vampire Weekend (Monolith)(9/13)
  • The Fratellis (2nd x)(Monolith)(9/13)
  • Cut Copy (Monolith)(9/13)
  • Sam Phillips (9/6)
  • Great Lake Swimmers (8/22)
  • She & Him (8/5)
  • The Raconteurs (lollapalooza) (3rd x) (8/1)
  • Cat Power (lollapalooza) (2nd x) (8/1)
  • Black Keys (lollapalooza) (8/1)
  • The Kills (lollapalooza) (8/1)
  • Rogue Wave (lollapalooza) (3rd x) (8/1)
  • Earlimart (7/26)
  • The Office (surprise openers billed as “Peter & the Rabbits”) (7/26)
  • Spoon (Pitchfork) (2nd x) (7/20)
  • Bon Iver (Pitchfork) (3rd x) (7/20)
  • Occidental Brothers Dance Band International (Pitchfork) (7/20)
  • Ghostface Killah & Raekwon (Pitchfork) (7/20)
  • The Apples in Stereo (Pitchfork) (7/20)
  • Boris (Pitchfork) (7/20)
  • The Dirty Projectors (Pitchfork) (7/20)
  • Jarvis Cocker (Pitchfork) (7/19)
  • The Hold Steady (Pitchfork) (4th? 5th? x) (7/19)
  • Dizzee Rascal (Pitchfork) (7/19)
  • Fleet Foxes (Pitchfork) (7/19)
  • Caribou (Pitchfork) (7/19)
  • A Hawk and a Hacksaw (Pitchfork) (7/19)
  • Lyle Lovett and His Large Band (Ravinia) (4th x) (7/11)
  • Feist (Ravinia) (7/10)
  • Mike Doughty (Taste of Randolph) (4th x) (6/20)
  • Robert Plant / Alison Krauss (Ravinia) (6/18)
  • Peter Mulvey (Old Town art fair) (4th x) (6/14)
  • Nada Surf (Ribfest) (6/8)
  • Sea Wolf (6/5)
  • The Long Blondes (5/24)
  • Crowded House (5/10)
  • Rogue Wave (2nd x) (4/19)
  • Girlyman (4/13)
  • Meg Hutchinson (opener) (4/13)
  • Bon Iver (2nd x)(4/10)
  • The Raveonettes (3/18)
  • Matt Nathanson (!!!) (3/17)
  • Dan le Sac vs. Scroobius Pip (3/12)
  • Carrie Newcomer (3/9)
  • The Spares (opener) (3/9)
  • Peter Mulvey (3rd x) (3/8)
  • Doug Hoekstra (opener) (3/8)
  • Griffin House (2nd x) (3/1)
  • Sons of William (opener) (3/1)
  • Kin (opener) (3/1)
  • James Blunt (2/22)
  • Sara Bareilles (opener) (2/22)
  • Jason Isbell (2/8)
  • Joe Henry (2/2)
  • Chris Connelly (opener) (2/2)
  • Bon Iver (1/18)

Big Screen: 15 Features from the Chicago Film Festival.

So back in October, I saw 15 films in 10 days at the Chicago Film Festival. I was quite ambitious in my ticket buying (obviously) and although I was a bit worn out at the end (it’s not like I had any days off work during this adventure), I saw a lot of interesting films, most of which I certainly would not have had the opportunity to see otherwise.

Day 1, Oct 17

The Pleasure of Being Robbed
Misleading description. Not about the pleasure of being robbed at all. Maybe a little bit about the pleasure of robbing, not that it even seemed that pleasurable, and the cinematography wasn’t interesting enough to keep the viewer involved. This wasn’t terrible, but we both felt it smacked of “senior year art project”. And as T pointed out: it ended and you weren’t even sure you knew the main character’s name, much less her motivations. 2.5 out of 5.

Wendy & Lucy
Really nuanced wonderful performance by Michelle Williams. But sad, hard to watch, and one of those movies where it’s more “a portrait of a moment” than a movie/story. Minimal plot. And our second movie of the day featuring a girl who is somewhat lost and alone. 3.5 out of 5. Great performance but not much there otherwise.

Let the Right One In
Beautiful. One of my faves of the festival. Slowly paced, dim and quiet. Sweden. Winter. Loneliness. Vampire. Love. So glad to see this one is getting a more widespread release (if you can consider indie theaters in big cities to be widespread). If you read the review in EW and decided not to see it, I urge you to go anyway. It was really lovely and moving. Icky in places, but quite powerful. This is definitely a 5 out of 5 for me.

Day 2, Oct 18

Sparrow
Very fun. Slapstick drama about four brothers who are all pickpockets and all get involved with the same woman. Her end of the plot was a bit lame but it was so fun, I really didn’t mind that. Sort of Marx Brothers in Hong Kong with a little more seriousness. 3.5 out of 5.

Surveillance
One of only a few US-centric flicks we saw. First 2/3rds = really interesting, tightly plotted, intriguing flick. Last 1/3rd = insane twist that throws away a LOT of the good stuff from earlier on and makes it not nearly as interesting. Bizarre. And then the credits roll and “Oh, directed by Jennifer Lynch. From the content of that movie, I HAVE to think she’s related to David.” 3 out of 5.

Day 3, Oct 19

Hunger
So good. So sad. HARD to watch. Death of IRA leader Bobby Sands by hunger strike (which had followed a “rub shit on the walls” strike). Loved the first half. Neat stuff showing how the prisoners found ways to communicate both with each other and with the outside world. A really really interesting (long) conversation in the middle of the film between Sands and a priest. But didn’t like how the second half (or last third maybe) of the movie lets all the other characters drop away and basically you just watch someone waste away, hallucinate(?) and die. 4 out of 5. Really good but could have easily been better just by keeping the stories of the other prisoners/activists going.

North Starr
Poor. Definitely the weakest entry I have seen not just this year but last year as well. Poorly written and acted, heavy handed. Maybe a 2 out of 5 and that’s generous. Not sure how this even got selected.

Day 4, Oct 20: No movies for me.

Day 5, Oct 21

Everlasting Moments
WWI Sweden. Woman stuck in bad marriage, constant pregnancy, poverty, etc. Gets the gift of a camera. Changes her life. Somewhat. Beautifully done. The grunge of their lives so well portrayed/styled/etc. 4 out of 5.

Zach & Miri Make a Porno
I am not unbiased about Kevin Smith. I fucking loved this movie. I loved it even more after he took Q&A for an hour afterwards. Sure, it’s crass and gross and whatever else people are saying about it. It’s also super sweet and romantic and really fucking funny. 5 out of 5.

Day 6, Oct 22

Two Lovers
Not very good and you know I love Joaquin Phoenix so that was sad. Same director as We Own The Night which while somewhat formulaic/predictable was a much better movie than this one. Convoluted. And unlike how seeing Kevin Smith’s Q&A made me love his movie more, this Q&A went the other direction.
2.5 out of 5.

Day 7, Oct 23

Girl by the Lake
Italian murder mystery. Starts with your classic misdirection. Some nice subplots about the lead detective’s own life. Liked it. But not sure the conclusion really worked. 3.5 out of 5.

Day 8, Oct 24

Country Wedding
Two busloads of Icelandic family members lost trying to find the right church for a wedding. Some really funny stuff. Some sweet. But dragged a bit. Could have used some zippier editing or maybe a few more contretemps thrown in. 3 out of 5.

Julia
Totally crazy movie about people making insanely bad decisions and then following through on them only to have even worse happen. A lot of it was really uncomfortable and hard to watch. But this is by far the most human I have ever seen Tilda Swinton be. So that was interesting. 3.5 out of 5.

Day 9, Oct 25

Snow
Beautiful. A Bosnian village of women whose men have gone to war and vanished, trying to find ways not just to survive for themselves but to keep their community together. Slowly paced. But really good. 4.5 out of 5.

Day 10, October 26

Terribly Happy
Denmark. This is totally Hot Fuzz, minus the comedy and upping the eerie stuff by half or more. Really creepy and nuts. Very entertaining. Lots of misdirection. Had a little sense of slapstick but in a very serious way. 4 out of 5.

Books Read in 2008

  • The Scarecrow and His Servant, by Philip Pullman (12/29)
  • Disquiet, by Julia Leigh (12/28)
  • Silver Wings for Vicki, by Helen Wells (12/28)
  • If the River Was Whiskey, by T. Coraghessan Boyle (12/25) (stories)
  • Black & White, by Dani Shapiro (12/22)
  • A Spy in the Family; An Erotic Comedy, by Alec Waugh (12/22)
  • A Circle is a Balloon and Compass Both: Stories about Human Love, by Ben Greenman (12/21)
  • Tender Morsels, by Margo Lanagan (12/20)
  • The Trial, by Kafka (12/12)
  • Deaf Sentence, by David Lodge (12/3)
  • The Lover’s Knot, by Clare O’Donohue (12/1)
  • The Way of Shadows, by Brent Weeks (11/30)
  • The Oxford Book of Short Stories, edited by V.S. Pritchett (11/29)
  • The Conversations at Curlow Creek, by David Malouf (10/31)
  • The New Granta Book of the American Short Story, edited by Richard Ford (10/31)
  • Her Majesty’s Dragon, by Naomi Novik (10/19)
  • The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson (10/09)
  • Iodine, by Haven Kimmel (9/24)
  • Sway, by Zachary Lazar (9/20)
  • Dead Boys, by Richard Lange (9/15) (stories)
  • The Man Without Qualities, Vol 1, by Robert Musil (9/7)
  • The Hob’s Bargain, by Patricia Briggs (8/19)
  • Bolt, by Dick Francis (8/11) (re-read, many times over)
  • Break In, by Dick Francis (8/11) (re-read, many times over)
  • Unmentionables, by Beth Ann Fennelly (8/3) (poetry)
  • Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Knowledge Here Begins Out There, ed. by Jason T. Eberl (8/3)
  • Breaking Dawn, by Stephenie Meyer (8/2)
  • The Likeness, by Tana French (8/2)
  • Peeps, by Scott Westerfeld (7/26)
  • Finding Battlestar Galactica, an Unauthorized Guide, ed. by Lynnette Porter, David Lavery, & Hillary Robson (7/24)
  • Absurdistan, A Novel, by Gary Shteyngart (7/20)
  • Trespass, by Valerie Martin (7/7)
  • Nothing to Lose, by Lee Child (6/29)
  • Dark Roots, by Cate Kennedy (6/25) (stories)
  • Lush Life, by Richard Price (6/23)
  • Life Class, by Pat Barker (6/16)
  • Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion Season 3, by David Bassom (6/13)
  • Raven’s Strike, by Patricia Briggs (6/12)
  • The Farther Shore, by Matthew Eck (6/11)
  • Raven’s Shadow, by Patricia Briggs (6/10)
  • War with the Newts, by Karel Capek (6/9)
  • Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion Season 2, by David Bassom (6/8)
  • Battlestar Galactica: The Official Companion, by David Bassom (6/6)
  • The Collected Stories, by Isaac Bashevis Singer (5/31) (stories)
  • The Final Detail, by Harlan Coben (5/24)
  • One False Move, by Harlan Coben (5/22)
  • Dragon Blood, by Patricia Briggs (5/20)
  • Dragon Bones, by Patricia Briggs (5/18)
  • The Devil of Nanking, by Mo Hayder (5/10)
  • Slam, by Nick Hornby (5/4)
  • Bad Luck and Trouble, by Lee Child (5/2)
  • Just One Look, by Harlan Coben (5/2)
  • Back Spin, by Harlan Coben (4/29)
  • The Death of Virgil, by Hermann Broch (4/28)
  • Fade Away, by Harlan Coben (4/28)
  • The Monsters of Templeton, by Lauren Groff (4/22)
  • Belong to Me, by Marisa de los Santos (4/18)
  • Drop Shot, by Harlan Coben (4/13)
  • The Watchman, a Joe Pike novel, by Robert Crais (4/5)
  • The Tourmaline, by Paul Park (3/30)
  • The Murder at the Vicarage, by Agatha Christie (3/26)
  • Let`s Talk About Love: A Journey to the End of Taste, by Carl Wilson (3/25)
  • The Naming of the Dead, by Ian Rankin (3/24)
  • Ms. Pettigrew Lives for the Day, by Winifred Watson (3/22)
  • The Hounds and the Fury, by Rita Mae Brown (3/20 or 21 while crossing international date line)
  • The Hunt Ball, by Rita Mae Brown (3/20)
  • The Complete Stories, by David Malouf (3/19) (stories)
  • The Meaning of It All: Thoughts of a Citizen Scientist, by Richard P. Feynman (3/3)
  • The Good Soldier Svejk, by Jaroslav Hasek (2/28)
  • The Faithful Spy, by Alex Berenson (2/19)
  • A Princess of Roumania, by Paul Park (2/18)
  • Iron Kissed, by Patricia Briggs (2/1)
  • You Must Be This Happy to Enter, by Elizabeth Crane (1/31) (stories)
  • Tree of Smoke, by Denis Johnson (1/29)
  • Fortunate Son, by Walter Mosley (1/27)
  • Dead I Well May Be, by Adrian McKinty (1/27)
  • Native Guard, by Natasha Trethewey (1/25) (poetry)
  • The Oxford Book of English Short Stories, edited by A.S. Byatt (1/24) (stories)
  • Housekeeping vs. the Dirt, by Nick Hornby (1/1)

Duff at the Movies 2008

  • Bolt! (12/28)
  • Milk (11/28)
  • Quantum of Solace (11/15)
  • Expresso Bongo (11/8) (1959)
  • Terribly Happy (Chicago Film Festival)(10/26)(Danish)
  • Snow (Chicago FIlm Festival)(10/25)(Bosnian)
  • Julia (Chicago Film Festival)(10/24)
  • Country Wedding (Chicago Film Festival)(10/24)(Icelandic)
  • The Girl by the Lake (Chicago Film Festival)(10/23) (Italian)
  • Two Lovers (Chicago Film Festival)(10/22)
  • Zach and Miri Make a Porno (Chicago Film Festival)(10/21)
  • Everlasting Moments (Chicago Film Festival)(10/21) (Swedish)
  • North Starr (Chicago Film Festival)(10/19)
  • Hunger (Chicago Film Festival)(10/19)
  • Surveillance (Chicago Film Festival)(10/18)
  • Sparrow (Chicago Film Festival)(10/18) (Chinese)
  • Let the Right One In (Chicago Film Festival)(10/17) (Swedish)
  • Wendy & Lucy (Chicago Film Festival)(10/17)
  • The Pleasure of Being Robbed (Chicago Film Festival) (10/17)
  • The Duchess (10/16)
  • Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (10/5)
  • Burn After Reading (9/27)
  • Tropic Thunder (9/21)
  • Wall-E (8/9)
  • The Dark Knight (7/22)
  • Wanted (6/29)
  • The Fall (6/14)
  • Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (6/8)
  • Sex and the City (5/31)
  • Redbelt (5/25)
  • Iron Man (5/20)
  • Made of Honor (5/4)
  • Leatherheads (4/24)
  • Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day (4/12)
  • Be Kind, Rewind (3/2)
  • Vantage Point (2/24)
  • Cloverfield (2/18)
  • There Will Be Blood (2/10)
  • Beowulf (IMAX) (1/9)
  • Atonement (1/1)

Big Screen: MILK

Soooooo good. Outstanding performances. Sean Penn is just as good as people are saying but I was especially impressed by James Franco. At the end, they show the actors vs. the real people they were portraying? And holy crap the casting and styling on this movie were just PITCH PERFECT. Really well done, poignant and moving, but funny and crass at times as well. Not that I know much about Harvey Milk, but it seemed they were very true to who he was, and those funny quirks that make up a person.

And then you come out of the theater and think “So where are we with gay rights now, in 2008, some 30 years later? Well, let’s see. We just outlawed gay marriage in a shitload of states, including some where it was already legal. That ain’t a step forward.” And then you feel even MORE depressed than the movie may have already made you over an untimely death.

What a Fucked Up World we are living in.

Best of September

I seem to have fallen behind here, haven’t I. Kept waiting for myself to have written up movies, books, etc., before doing these. Ah well.

The best movie I saw in September (of only two, so take that as you will) was Tropic Thunder, which will definitely make my Top 10 this year.

The best book I read in September was the short story collection “Dead Boys” by Richard Lange. (But I did really like both the other books (one, two) I read in September as well.)

The best gig I went to in September was (overall) Monolith and my favorite performance there was Band of Horses, a magical twilight moment.

My favorite tunes in September were (the only in some cases or the most recent) albums Schwayze (yeah, I know I’m the only one, but it’s FUN), The Billionaires, The Wave Pictures and Everlast.

Random personal highlights: The aforementioned weekend at Monolith (including visiting Mariah, Stephan and Jack!).

Lowlights? Well. If you know about the secondary browsing location and events therein, then you know I had a very, very, very shitty September. Very Shitty. And honestly, the fallout is still going on.

Fantasy: The Way of Shadows, by Brent Weeks

You know that old joke about “why wasn’t anybody poor in their “past lives”?” How in our past lives, we were all Cleopatras and Queen Elizabeth’s and nobody was “the servant girl”. (Speaking to the females in the audience, obviously.) I often feel that way about fantasty novels, they are always taking place in the world one would WANT to be in, where your special magical talents bring you into interaction with the best crowds, the higher bits of “society” and generally, of course, fighting against evils/evil magics.

This book, on the other hand, is set firmly in the lower dregs. The world of “guild rats”, i.e., abandoned homeless “ghetto” children and, for Azoth/Kylar, the way out is to become an assassin, a “wet boy”, sometimes using those evil magics the heros of your typical fantasy are usually working against. There will be of course times when the “bad assassin” will turn out to be working on the side of the morally good, but for the most part, the focuses of this book are on the other side of things, in the back alleys, in the prostitution houses, on the outskirts. “Under the stairs”, so to speak.

It’s violent, brutal and cutthroat. And very engaging.

Short Stories: The Oxford Book of Short Stories, by V.S. Pritchett

Our November challenge book. Admittedly many of these stories are drawn from older/earlier writers, but a big chunk of them felt dated to me moreso in their style than anything else. This is just a random, not researched or well thought out, theory but modern short stories seem to have stronger plots, better drawn (and perhaps intenser) situations, more things happen, and people have stronger reactions to the happenings, while many of the stories from earlier times seem more passive: one character “telling the story” to another, i.e., stories told at a remove (via third person, epistolary, storytelling or other device). Stories where almost nothing happens, or the sense that something “might” happen (sometimes a very specific thing) turns out…not. And then the story just…ends.

Although the Byatt-edited collection we read earlier in the year had stated that it picked “scary” stories purposely, we both found a lot of those icky, or super sad, but not scary. This collection however had some real creep-you-outers.

My favorite was “The Demon Lover” by Elizabeth Bowen.

p.s. yes you’re right it’s sad that it has taken me so long to get to writing about anything I read in October or November that I don’t have the DadReactions to these challenges in my head anymore. But you’ll live without them, I’m sure.

Fantasy: His Majesty’s Dragon, by Naomi Novik

Unusual fantasy taking dragons and plopping them into our historical world (as opposed to planting them in a more fantasy-bound world a la Anne McCaffery, who I dearly love and whose first six or so dragon books will never be equaled*). Dragons as an essential part of aerial battle strategy as the Brits (and others) war against Napoleon. Really entertaining but what made this book for me was the dragon, whose voice I thought was better written (and more engaging to the reader) than those of the humans.

Temeraire, you are awesome.

*More on that soon. SRSLY.

Fiction: The Conversations at Curlow Creek, by David Malouf

I’ve read and enjoyed quite a bit of Malouf in the last several years and this book was no exception. An officer talking to a convict in the wilds of Australia, feeling a possible connection to something from his past, and reminiscing on the choices he’s made, and his childhood loves, and how his life has taken him away from them, and opportunities to find them again. A quiet slim book that packs quite a punch.

…he had long since given up the belief that the forces that move us have anything to do either with nature or reason, or that the heart moves in anything but the most crooked way.