Concerning Life as It Is Supposed to Be

Category: Movies

Answers

ANSWER #1:

The answers given to the request for favorite Nicolas Cage movies generated no consensus. Mentioned were

Gone in Sixty Seconds

Family Man

National Treasure

The Rock

Trapped in Paradise

With honorable mention going to

8MM

Matchstick Men

Bringing Out the Dead

I’m surprised no one mentioned Moonstruck, a movie in which he plays a non-Cage type character.

My favorite has to be Raising Arizona, both because I love the premise and the characters, but also because it bears that Coen Brother’s quirkiness.

ANSWER #2:

In this post, I posed a riddle: two 2008 films in which the male lead early in the film is expected to die. One was correctly guessed and the other was not. No surprise here. Seven Pounds with Will Smith in the lead drew much more attention than the other one I had in mind. Henry Poole Is Here stars Luke Wilson as a man who moves back to his old neighborhood to die, being diagnosed with a rare and terminal disease.

With death in the air, Henry Poole is much more hopeful than Seven Pounds, but each raises intriguing questions in their own way. It was purely coincidental that Barb and I watched both films on the same night.

ANSWER #3:

Our new friend Greg has enabled me to sleep at night now that he has solved, with some sense of authority, my puzzlement over the flight path of an M & M. Thanks, Greg.

A Movie Riddle

This week’s posts are heavy on movies. (I’ve resisted the BIG EVENT, the one that my wife and daughter and a zillion others took in at midnight last Tuesday night/Wednesday morning.)

This post, a curious one, is a movie riddle.

Last Friday night, Barb and I chose two movies, knowing next to nothing about either of them. However different the films were (and they were very different), they shared this in common: very early in the film, the audience is given the idea that the lead male character is to die by the end of the film.

So, here is the riddle: what two movies (both released in 2008) did we watch?

[Note: IMDB lists 24,525 movies released in 2008, so you might not want to try the browse method of finding the answer!]

Nicolas Cage

While the movie Knowing is on our minds, here is a question for you: what is your favorite Nicolas Cage movie?

I began scanning his IMDB filmography, and apart from being amazed at the diversity of his roles, noted a couple that I really liked… but one stands out as my favorite.

Of all he has done, what has been your favorite?

Later I’ll reveal mine.

von Daniken or Noah?


Recently we watched the movie Knowing with Nicolas Cage. This film is hard to discuss without giving away details, so if you’ve not seen the movie and intend to, and like to enter the experience without any preconceptions perhaps not reading any further would be a good idea.

I have had debates with both my resident daughters after seeing this film regarding the identity of the silent creatures we see on film. Are we to see them as angels or as aliens?

These creatures appear on the scene just prior to the world’s final conflagration, and though their intentions seem ambiguous throughout the story, by the end you learn that their goal is to rescue off the dying planet human pairs to populate other, younger, and more flourishing worlds.

So, are they angels or demons? Is this a Noah story or something else?

Years ago there was a wildly popular book called Chariots of the Gods by Erich von Daniken. von Daniken postulated that the world has been visited by aliens in the past, and that much of the religious imagery used by various religions, but especially in the Jewish and Christian heritage is a reflection of that alien presence. So what the biblical writers record as ‘angels’ might very well have been alien visitors.

Seeing the connection?

In looking for something else a few weeks ago I noted that the 17th best selling book at Amazon.com currently is this book. It comes in at #305 overall. I wondered, “What’s up with this?”

I don’t know if the movie Knowing spawned a new interest in the book, or if the resurgent popularity of the book and its thesis formed the impetus for the movie. Though some viewers see Christian supernatural themes in this movie (the main character is a man estranged from his hard core preacher father – we preacher fathers can be quite hard to deal with – and his childhood faith), in my opinion, the filmmakers were channeling von Daniken and not Noah.

In other words, to the question ‘Were they angels or aliens?’ my answer is, ‘Yes’, which is as a thesis, ultimately, a denial of angels.

I’d love to hear others weigh in on this film.

(Note: the film is currently #1 in online download from the iTunes store)

The Fog of War


I was fourteen in 1970, when four students were killed at Kent State University in a protest over the Vietnam War, and I lived in a community and context where questions about the war were not an issue. So, I never questioned it.

In 1974 when I turned 18, with a #11 draft lottery number, I applied for conscientious objector status, not that I opposed in any way the then winding down war, but because I had a misunderstanding of the biblical teaching on conflict and war.

The Vietnam War was never more for me than scattered images on a television screen interrupting my carefree high school and early college years. For many others, of course, this war was much more.

So, at the time, the name of Robert McNamara was nothing more than an occasional name heard on the TV news. I did not know him as a major architect of the American presence in that war (as the American Secretary of Defense from 1961-1968). Much that was later by some seen as offensive and immoral in this war has been laid at his feet.

McNamara’s recent death has brought his name back to the forefront of public conversation, and has renewed interest in a movie I think I’d like to see.

Errol Morris is a documentary film maker. Several years ago, I watched his movie Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr. (not yet available on DVD) about a man who was an expert on execution techniques, served as a consultant to the various state prisons where executions were performed, and was, late in life, recruited to the cause of those who deny that the holocaust ever occurred. Though it sounds like heavy fair, it was a fascinating film.

Morris as well produced a film based upon a series of interviews with Robert McNamara. The film, The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of Robert S. McNamara, received strong critical praise, winning a number of awards, including the Oscar for best documentary feature. Admittedly, the film elite will be favorable to anything remotely critical of an unpopular war. But having seen Morris’s work before, I’m persuaded that this is not a Michael Moore fantasy. Morris lets people speak for themselves.

I think that given the current debate over the ambiguous nature of war, and the recent death of McNamara, now would be a good time to watch the film. I have it on order, and intend to sit down and watch it sometime in the next two weeks.

I don’t want to do this alone. If you would like to sit with others to watch and discuss (civilly!) this movie, let me know! If there is interest, I’ll arrange a time when we can do this together.

And if you have seen the movie already, post your comments below. I’m interested.

AK Movie?


As I continue to make my way through Anna Karenina, I was wondering if there is a good movie version?

My experience is that Hollywood has little success with Russian novels. I have yet to find a good film version of Crime and Punishment. The version with the most promising cast (Ben Kingsley, Patrick Dempsey, Julie Delpy) was really, really bad.

IMDB lists 20 attempts at AK. Most intriguing to me are these:

1935 – Greta Garbo and Basil Rathbone

1997 – Sophie Marceau (Princess Isabelle in Braveheart) and Sean Bean (Boromir in LOTR)

Then there is the 1948 version starring Vivian Leigh. I can hear it now: “Frankly, Anna, I don’t give…”

Wouldn’t a silent version be interesting?

Any suggestions?

The Sure Thing


A question you are no doubt puzzling over this morning is this: whatever happened to Daphne Zuniga?

Zuniga played Princess Vespa in Mel Brooks‘ Star Wars spoof Spaceballs. What I discovered Friday night is that, unlike the actress she spoofed, Carrie Fisher, Daphne Zuniga can really act.

We saw her starring alongside of a very young John Cusack in a cute Rob Reiner romantic comedy called The Sure Thing. Yes, it is heavy in the ‘gotta have sex’ bravado that Hollywood assumes consumes all American males. But, for Reiner, once again, ‘twu wuv‘ triumphs.

A really enjoyable movie. Think When Harry Met Sally or It Happened One Night.

So whatever happened to this leading lady?

Gran Torino


Clint Eastwood turned 79 two weeks ago. Some men by that age have done nothing but play golf for fifteen years. During that same time span, Eastwood has acted in seven movies, directed fourteen, wrote the music for five, and was nominated for seven oscars, winning two.

I’m glad he has eschewed retirement. He’s just too good to retire.

Gran Torino stars Eastwood and is directed by him. An Eastwood film is guaranteed to be two things: entertaining and provocative. Gran Torino lives up to those standards.

The movie asks us to be sympathetic to a caustic, bitter, racist widower. There is a part of me which says that I should have nothing but disdain for this guy. But I can’t hate him. In a similar way, he wants nothing more than to hate his Hmong neighbors, but finds that he can’t. Eastwood’s characters struggle with Christianity in many of his movies, and so here. But the priest is persistent in his pursuit of the sheep. And the ending clearly is meant to invoke images of Christ. Why?

This is a film worth enjoying, and worth discussing. For me that is a winning conversation.

Immediately after a film, people want to know what I think of it. I can’t always say. But as I type, my daughter was wanting to head off to Blockbuster to get a movie. I found myself laboring to persuade her to watch Gran Torino. Clearly, I am a fan.

+ + + + +

That all said, if the movie had nothing else to commend it, these thirty seconds would be worth watching for any man:

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