Monday various

Recent movie roundup

Last night, I watched Push, which I wanted to enjoy more than I did. It’s a colorful look at Hong Kong, if nothing else, but the plot is such a terrible muddle. I think my opinion falls somewhere between Roger Ebert, who wrote:

“Push” has vibrant cinematography and decent acting, but I’m blasted if I know what it’s about.

And Tasha Robinson, who wrote:

The subject matter is propulsive adolescent fun all the way, with a pop sensibility, some nifty costume and set design, and a lot of special-effects-powered showdowns—but the execution reaches for a broader audience, one so unfamiliar with the genre tropes that it needs the assiduous extra explanation, plus time to ponder each new development. The resultant moderate pacing has its appeal; it turns Push into an ambling, broody concoction along the lines of Strange Days. At times, a more aggressive editor would help immensely. At others, Push explores its brutish future Hong Kong with a patience and sense of milieu that seems cribbed more from Wong Kar-wai than Doug Liman.

Robinson is a lot more forgiving of the movie’s faults, which stem largely from its script (front-loaded with unnecessary exposition and never truly resolving anything), but also from a sometimes confused, or at least over-stylized, visual sense. The movie is often very pretty, but it’s not always clear what that aesthetic is in service of. The location shooting in Hong Kong is, at first, one of the movie’s biggest strengths — it’s a truly exotic and vibrant city, rarely seen like this from the ground-level up, and so it’s almost its own character in the film — but by the end it seemed increasingly less organic to the story, more style than substance. The climactic action at the stuff-that-looks-cool-when-it-explodes factory just serves to drive this home.

And it’s a shame, because there’s a genuinely interesting story, with some decent world-building, lurking around the edges. It’s not a good movie, but I can’t shake the feeling that it could have been.

Then this afternoon, I watched The Time Traveler’s Wife with a couple of friends. I thought it was a decent, if unremarkable adaptation of a book that, while entertaining, didn’t really cry out to be adapted.

I liked that it addressed my main quibble with Audrey Niffenegger’s book — which I just finished reading a couple of weeks ago, actually — which was that its title was a bit of a misnomer. The book is less about the time traveler’s wife, Clare, than about the time traveler himself, Henry. While the book offers significantly more detail from both of their perspectives, I rarely felt like Clare emerged as a fully developed character in its pages, at least not outside of her undying love for Henry and their strange relationship. I liked both of them, but I felt that I got to know Henry better. Maybe it’s due to Rachel McAdams — I think she and Eric Bana are well cast, and I agree with Roger Ebert that they “have a pleasant chemistry, and sort of involved me in spite of myself” — but this Clare seems like more of a person to me.

Ultimately, I think I liked the book better, and I think it handled its underlying conceit more ably than the film. But the film is reasonably entertaining, and I’m not sorry I saw it. Maybe that’s damning it with faint praise, but it isn’t half bad.

But I think we can all agree that this is a pretty odd choice for a wedding song. Don’t get me wrong, I think Broken Social Scene do an interesting cover of the song, but even if you don’t know its history or anything about Joy Division and Ian Curtis’ suicide, “Love Will Tear Us Apart” hardly seems like the sentiment for a first dance between husband and wife.

Of course, it does kind of make me want to re-watch 24 Hour Party People

Friday various

  • I haven’t yet been to Manhattan’s new High Line park, but now I see what I’ve been missing:

    Some guests at The Standard Hotel have stripped off to frolic naked in front of their rooms’ floor-to-ceiling windows, which are easily viewed from the newly-opened elevated High Line park.

    I particularly like how the hotel promises “to ‘remind guests of the transparency’ of the windows.” Who knew windows were transparent?!

  • In all the talk about saving Reading Rainbow, which is going off the air after 26 years, I’ve been sort of amazed that no one’s remarked on one simple thing: the show actually went off the air three years ago. At least, that’s when Burton quit, disappointed with the direction the show’s news owners wanted to take it. New episodes haven’t been made since 2006. It’s disappointing there isn’t money in anybody’s pockets to keep repeats on the air — it really was a terrific program — but it’s also a little disingenuous (or only half the story) to call this the show’s end.
  • If you’re really feeling nostalgic for PBS children’s programming, why not check out the original pitch for Sesame Street?
  • I didn’t find TinEye particularly useful myself, but I do kind of like the idea of a “reverse search engine.” [via]
  • And finally, Warren Ellis on the smallness of the future:

    I miss vast, mad underground bases as much as the next person, possibly more, because deep down I feel like I always should have been a James Bond villain – but I adore the fact that the Jet Propulsion Lab appears to control the Mars rovers from a Portakabin somewhere outside Pasadena. And there’s great appeal in the notion that today’s architecture students will be faced with problems involving not great stupid boondoggles like Olympic stadia that in six years’ time will be nothing more than receptacles for the foaming, incandescent urine of meths-drinking tramps, but instead will be asked for solutions to concepts like the intron depot. From rust-prone compression rings and precast concrete sections for a tumour of idiocy, to atomic-scale cathedral stations for organising the blood-borne trajectories of rot-proof buckytube bullet-trains. This is beautiful to me.

Random 10 8/28

Last week. This week:

  1. “Starman” by Dar Williams (orig. David Bowie), guessed by Occupant
    Let all the children boogie
  2. “Feathers in a Bag” by Hera
    She’s been waiting for a storm
  3. “My Before and After” by Cotton Mather
    Said the word for alone is “alone”
  4. “The Charging Sky” by Jenny Lewis (w/ the Watson Twins)
    And it’s a surefire bet I’m gonna die
  5. “I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow” by the Soggy Bottom Boys, guessed by Victor
    Maybe your friends think I’m just a stranger
  6. “Don’t Forget to Dance” by the Kinks, guessed by Occupant
    And all the young punks whistle at you
  7. “I’ve Loved Enough to Know” by Deana Carter
    I hear what you’re telling me but that don’t make it so
  8. “Beware of Darkness” by George Harrison, guessed by Kim
    And that is not what you are here for
  9. “Shake a Tail Feather” by the Five Du-Tones, guessed by Occupant
    Well I know that the rock and roll is not for shy
  10. “Atomic Dog” by George Clinton, guessed by Occupant
    Futuristic bow-wow

Last one for August. Good luck!