Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Top Female Television Characters
Clocking in at number 5 is Claudia aka "Granny" from The Americans. Played by the fabulous Margo Martindale "Granny" is the ultimate Soviet spy or at least she appears to be. Always calm and collected but as vicious and conniving as few characters can dare to dream of becoming. There is a strong distrust of Claudia by both Phillip and Elizabeth. One is sure that their not too far off in being convinced that Claudia isn't all she appears to be. Best moment calling Elizabeth by her true Russian name repeatedly to get under her skin. Wonderful character!
Monday, April 29, 2013
Top Female Television Characters
Clocking in at number 6 on my list of top female television characters currently on television is Fiona Gallagher. As the default matriarch of the Gallagher clan she is the glue that holds the dysfunctional family in line. Emmy Rossum is brilliant in this role and does a great job of displaying a wide arrange of believable emotions throughout each episode and in my opinion without her being the center of the show everything else would fall apart.
Top Female Television Characters
Coming in at number 7 on my list of top current female television actresses is Lena Headey who plays the always manipulating and clever Cersei Lannister.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Top 8 Female Television Characters
I am counting down my eight favorite female characters currently on television. Checking in at number 8 is Gemma Teller. Peg Bundy has come a long long way. Actually the underrated and brilliantly talented Katey Sagal has shown the world just how great of an actress she really is playing the matriarch of SAMCRO. Part Lady Macbeth, part overprotective mother, and completely original. Katey Sagal has created one of the most complex and interesting female characters to ever appear on television. The only thing predictable about her behavior is that fact that when she does not get her way she will find any possible means to correct that injustice. Somehow when the smoke clears and everyone else has fallen it seems impossible to think of Gemma not being there to guide the club in whatever direction she wants them to go in. A truly remarkable character indeed!
Sunday, April 21, 2013
The Running Man
The Running Man
The Running Man is a film that examines how television in the most extreme of circumstances can greatly affect a societies attitudes towards violence. In that regard the film was exceptionally prescient. Far from being a standard action film to showcase the talents of Arnold Schwarzenegger this film did an excellent job at examining the idea of reality television and it's affect on a society long before the so called reality television craze officially began. The Hunger Games takes many cues from this underrated film as the basic plot centers a round a game show that has different bounty hunters hunt down and kill various criminals on live television. Schwarzenegger plays a man who has been framed and is considered to be amass murderer when he in fact refused a government order to fire upon innocent civilians.
It is amazing that this film hit upon how video footage as well as photography can be altered for various purposes and how people seem to blindly accept what they see on television as the truth. One of the most fascinating things about Arnold Schwarzenegger is that he his a big profile conservative who very much like the late Charlton Heston starred in a lot of action/sci-fi films that have very strong liberal messages and themes. One of the things that i admire about Arnold Schwarzenegger as a film star (not as a man because his womanizing destroyed his family) is that his films hold up much better over the years then his predecessors. It is hard to watch Steven Seagal movies now and appreciate their craft or appreciate how a pool stick is the most dangerous weapon known to man.
Arnold's films for the most part hold up because the films were excellent as was his acting in them. he played the role right and was the action hero icon of the 1980s and early 1990s. The Running Man is worth a look for how it portrays a culture fixated on television and reality television at that and on how the media manipulates information for it's own profit. Furthermore the films conclusion is very satisfying and in a way is truly epic for a science fiction/action film in that exposing the truth and bringing people together can get people to realize how they have been tricked and that society needs to change. Highly recommend this film!
Friday, April 12, 2013
Battlestar Galactica
Battlestar
Galactica Ending: A Ceremonial Slap in the Face!
The Sci-Fi Channel
remake of Battlestar Galactica committed
the worst atrocity in the history of science fiction television. It took the
age old concept of man playing God and having it blow up in his face and then
actually added God into the mix. Not only did this dramatic turn of events
essentially come out of nowhere, it also greatly diminished the dramatic tension
in the series. It also took the always dreaded Deus ex machine ending and
applied it to the show in a truly literal sense. This was a real shame because what
really made Battlestar Galactica such
a special show was in watching how the characters reacted to their changing environment
and then had to adjust their own actions based on the new situations that they found
themselves in. It was a human drama and the fact that certain characters of
their own freewill would come to certain decisions really made the show exceptionally
compelling.
Consider the character
of Laura Roslin played by the wonderful Mary
McDonnell. It was wonderful to watch her being transformed from the soft spoken
Secretary of Education to perhaps the
most noble and prideful President since George Washington. Also what a
wonderful idea to have the character use the cancer eating away at her body as
the catalyst to transform herself into a true “bad ass.” Mind you, this was also
before a character named Walter White
would make an appearance on our television screens and help to change
the face of television. This character transformation is made all the more
powerful because Laura Roslin decides to change not because God made it so but
because she rose to the occasion of the moment. Remember this is fictional
programming we are talking about here so unfortunately cramming God into the
plot in the rushed way that they did really hurts the show’s narrative
structure.
What also makes this ending
such a slap in the face is that the writing over the course of the show was
actually quite good. There were
excellent cliffhangers, dramatic turns of events, major character changes, and
we also had several major turning points in the show. In fact many of these dramatic
turns of events would have been perfect endings to the series. Remember the
discovery of the “real” earth and the enslavement of the colony by the Cylons?
The fact that the show possess at least two excellent endings and chooses not
to use them is just maddening. The writers
were also able to make the Cylons become more human than we ever thought
possible when they become complex enough to have a fraction of their members not
want to annihilate the humans. Essentially, the Cylons develop freewill and
then we have another contradiction because if God gave man freewill and man
created the Cylons, then the Cylons could not dvelop freewill because they were
not created by God.
Moreover, this Deus ex machina
ending is precisely the type of ending that good literary professors tell their
students to avoid at all costs. As such it is very much a slap in the face
across every fan of this show that watched every episode and even sat through
the “Razor” movie. We are rewarded for being faithful viewers by having the
final answer to everything in the show being that it was essentially God’s plan
to have the cylons and humans coexist together on an alien planet that is essentially
the earth that we grew up on. It is one thing to do this for a film over the
course of two hours or so but it is like a kick to the gut to end an entire
series like this. With that being said not every show needs to end in a definitive
fashion but not tying up any of your loose ends and simply using the presence
of God to explain everything is lazy writing.
The question to ask is was it the intention of the show’s
creators all along to reveal God’s master plan or did the show’s creators not
have any conclusive way to end the story? It makes The Sopranos ending look neat by comparison. I know there are those
of you out there that actually like this ending. I cannot possibly see why but
I understand that you are entitled to your opinion and I will respect that. Also,
say what you will about Lost but the show’s
conclusion does a better job of making the audience aware of it’s religious and
spiritual undertones then Battlestar
Galactica did. It really is a great shame because Battlestar Galactica did a great job of creating some truly
compelling television and in my opinion it alos did a great job of paralleling the
war on terrorism.
Perhaps it is too much
to have asked that ultimately what could have doomed the Cylon race was their
inability to have freewill and thus God’s presence could have been implemented
into this show in a much more emotionally refreshing way.
Matthew
Giordano
Jennifer Connelly
Jennifer
Connelly: The Underappreciated Female Johnny Depp
Johnny Depp is
considered by many to be one of the greatest actors of all time. He is also
admired for resisting big blockbuster roles for years as he instead opted to
choose roles in smaller more independent type films in which he played
exceptionally eccentric characters. Some of the characters helped endear him to
the public, Edward Scissorhands and
other others remain bizarrely brilliant to this day Ed Wood, The Ninth Gate, Benny and Joon. Essentially his choice
of roles allowed him to develop his acting ability and receive wonderful
critical acclaim for years. It was not until The Pirates of The Caribbean the Curse of The Black Pearl that he
truly became a legitimate blockbuster star and a true household name. I am
aware of how popular he was especially amongst women when he was on 21 Jump Street. In fact I may have been
one of the only young males in America who had his poster on my wall as a kid.
With that being said
this is not a love letter to Johnny Depp this an attempt to prove that in many
ways great female actors have been marginalized and overlooked for years. It is no secret that male actors receive far
more praise for the ability to portray different complex and engaging
characters then most actresses do. Blame it on a patriarchal society, blame it
on people thinking that Sandra Bullock is a good actress, (she talked with a
slight southern accent in The Blind Side
and people were like wow amazing) blame it on whatever you like. I would argue
that the talented and truly exceptional Jennifer Connelly in many ways followed
the same career path as Johnny Depp did and has created some of the most
memorable film roles over the last thirty years.
She first came to my
attention in the bizarrely wonderful
Labyrinth. A movie that I first saw at such a young age that I thought it
was a figment of my imagination. I really thought it was all in my head and I
actually developed a fear of mirrors for a while. It was not until years later
that I saw the movie on HBO one day and realized that this film was in fact
real and not something that was part of a bad dream that I had. I was both
relieved by this realization and also even more disturbed when I realized that
David Bowie was the Goblin King. Back to Jennifer Connelly she has never
appeared in a prototypical blockbuster film, she was in The Day the Earth Stood Still remake which tried to be a
blockbuster film and I have also tried to forget that she was in this complete
disaster so we will call it a wash.
When
you examine her career she has not only been in some exceptionally wonderful
movies but she has also created some fantastic characters. Requiem for a Dream, The
Rocketeer, Dark City, the
American remake of Dark Water, Mulholland Falls and of course A Beautiful Mind are just some of the
great films that she has had significant roles in. What amazes me about Jennifer
Connelly is her ability to play such diverse characters in such a wide array of
films. She has also done a great job at for the most part in continuing to
select roles that are both challenging and uniquely different. Also the fact
that my wife’s name is Jennifer has absolutely nothing to do with the fact that
I was in love with Jennifer Connelly as a child. At least I think so.
Matthew Giordano
Inception
Inception
Not as Original as You Think
Inception
was quite a rare film in that it truly achieved the status of a blockbuster
film while breaking one of the most fundamental rules of Hollywood films.
Hollywood films are designed to tell stories that audiences make an emotional
connection with as they follow the protagonist through their journey. In the
movie Inception it is impossible to
decipher what actually happens and what is simply a dream. Hollywood usually
has pretty clear cut rules that dream sequences must be labeled as such so that
the audience does not confuse their place in the plot of the film that they are
watching. For that aspect I admire the film.
However, I believe that
one fundamental problem with the film is that without the audience knowing what
they should care about that therefore there is no real emotional connection
that can be made to any of the characters in the film. Quite simply the movie
also becomes exceptionally boring at times because there is no tension in the
film because nothing matters within the context of the film. Essentially, one
scene has nothing to do with another and yes that makes the film’s dreamlike
qualities work well but it also makes for a very boring narrative. Furthermore,
plenty of other films have examined the idea of a dream within a dream. The
first A Nightmare on Elm Street film
in my opinion handles this concept in a far better way than Inception did in every way imaginable.
This truly interesting plot device works in A
Nightmare on Elm Street because you have just essentially watched the
character of Nancy have a nightmare. The dream never ends!
Additionally, other
films that have dealt with the concept of examining dreams are the
exceptionally underrated Vanilla Sky,
Jacob ’s ladder, and even The Wizard of Oz which people tend to
forget about. In fact almost any David Lynch film examines the world of dreams
in their own unique way. Eraserhead and
Mulholland Drive are probably his two
best films that examine how dreams and reality can often become entwined. If we
extend this line of thinking further to say that Inception is a movie that makes us question what is truly “real”
and what is not, than we can talk about a plethora of films that have examined
this very concept.
Total Recall, The Matrix, The Machinist, Dark City,
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Fight
Club, Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams and
even the brilliant movie If all deal
with the idea that reality is just a construct of the unconscious mind in some
way shape or form. Perhaps I am just cynical but all of the films that I have
mentioned I believe have examined the same concepts as Inception did in one form or another. I also believe that the films
that I have mentioned have done a much better cinematic job at bringing forward
the idea of examining the nature of dreams or the nature of what reality is
then Inception did.
I just feel that the
sweeping critical acclaim that Inception
received was a bit premature. Especially in cases when Inception was being praised for being a truly original film, when hopefully
I have just proved that this is not the case at all. Perhaps this stance is not
as controversial as my stance that Star
Wars Episode VI Return of the Jedi is a better movie then The Empire Strikes Back.
Matthew Giordano
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
The Walking Dead and the
Rebirth of the American Western
Never
in the history of their existence has zombie related programming been so wildly
popular throughout America. AMC has created an absolute ratings powerhouse with
The Walking Dead that has changed the
very idea of how many people a cable only network can reach. Almost fourteen
million people watched the season finale and these numbers are impressive for
network shows. This in turn has helped to push the networks to even try to compete
with these cable shows by presenting grittier, darker shows for the American
public and the world to consume. The recent Fox hit The Following is a good example of this. The question one should
really ask is why is The Walking Dead so
popular?
Is it simply that the quality of
acting on the show is outstanding? Andrew Lincoln and David Morrissey are two
particular standouts in my opinion. Is it that the show has a great story? Is
it that there is a fascination with a post apocalyptic world that has developed
very strongly amongst the culture since September 11? I would like to present
some food for thought. Perhaps the true popularity of The Walking Dead lies in the fact that is has resurrected one of
cinemas greatest art forms and an art form that has typically been seen as
being distinctly American. To put it simply The
Walking Dead is a very prototypical western.
All of the standard generic tropes
of the western film are present in The
Walking Dead. For one thing the iconography (visuals) constantly reminds us
that we are in fact watching a western. For one thing Rick is a sheriff whom
wears a cowboy hat and rides a horse. In arguably one of the shows finest
moments this imagery is straight out of almost any western film that you could
name. Additionally, other common traits of the western are gunfights, saloons,
the empty vast landscape, the dastardly villain. These are all heavily present
in The Walking Dead. Shane fulfilled
this role in the first two seasons of the show with The Governor taking over this
role in the third season. In season two of the show the character of Rick
undergoes a major transformation when he blows away two guns in an abandoned
saloon that is straight out of so many classic western films.
The most important and arguably the
most distinctively “American” aspect of the western is the idea of conquering
the frontier. This is one of the key myths in America’s mythology and the
western was one of the best art forms that expanded upon this idea.
Essentially, so many western films portray the American frontiersmen as good
and noble people trying to civilize the hostile and uncivilized world that they
find themselves in. This is exactly what is going on in The Walking Dead. Of course the “savages” who filled this landscape
were Native Americans who were demonized in most of these films. John Ford’s The Searchers remains probably the best
Western film to really examine this idea of what the “American’s” really
thought about the Native Americans that they encountered. In the world of The Walking Dead the zombies take the
place of the Native Americans as the savages who inhabit this vast landscape
and are a constant threat to the settlers of this new world.
What makes The Walking Dead so fascinating to me is that it has reinvented the
western film and it’s themes, plots and visual imagery make it very clear. Yet
I think that many of the fans of the show have not reached this conclusion. I
know that several of my students thought about this show in a completely new
way once I brought this idea to them. Many of them said that they would never
watch a western film because they cannot stand them and yet the absolutely love
The Walking Dead. I am not
proclaiming to be the only person to recognize this connection but nevertheless
I would argue that the show’s popularity especially in America is very much
rooted in it’s deep connection to western films. I also wonder if people needed
to be reconnected with these myths and ideals after an event like September 11
or if perhaps since western films are in such great decline if the timing was
simply right to bring back this ideology in a new and truly creative way.
Matthew Giordano
Death Note
I am not quite sure exactly how I found out about this anime show. It is possible that I was just randomly searching on amazon for anime shows and then looked into the reviews for the show and took a chance. What a fantastic freaking show! The premise is that God's of death are real and that they each possess a Death Note which is essentially a notebook that allows whoever has possession of it to kill anybody that they want simply by writing a persons name it and by picturing that person their mind at the same time. Usually I do not watch things dubbed in another language as aI prefer to watch films from other countries in their own language but the english language version of Death Note works great! I do not want to say too much about the show because the show has a lot of twists and turns that make this show highly addictive and compelling. It is also refreshing that it tells a complete story that has a definite ending, thank you Brittney! The premise is unique and wonderfully put together. The characters are exceptional including the character of L and Light Yagami. Very quickly the show turns into a cat and mouse game between the shows two major characters and it unfolds tremendously well. It may lag a little bit towards the end but the conclusion is satisfying in my opinion. The show although a cartoon should never be shown to young children as the themes are exceptionally dark. The show still has a lot of humor to it and this carries through almost the entire series. I highly recommend checking this show out. It is now one of my favorite shows ever! Great show.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Film Camera Innovation!
Great read about a technical achievement that will hopefully end the shaky handheld camera style!
http://gizmodo.com/5993678/this-new-camera-stabilizer-could-change-cinematography-forever
http://gizmodo.com/5993678/this-new-camera-stabilizer-could-change-cinematography-forever
Thursday, April 4, 2013
Roger Ebert
Unfortunately, the world has lost a truly great human being today. Roger Ebert arguably the most famous movie critic in the world or at least certainly the most famous American film critic has passed away after a long battle with cancer. He was 70 years old and those in the know probably saw this coming as he has not posted movie reviews on his website in quite some time. Still even expecting something like this I have to say that this is a really sad day for the world. What Roger has meant to the film industry cannot be understated and the studios knew that his "thumbs up" of a movie very often added a touch of credibility to a film that often in many cases helped these films to make more money and be seen by a much wider array of people. He did an excellent job at being able to bridge the gap between the academic and the general film going public. His reviews often touched upon film craft and structure as well as on the films ideology. In recent years he had taken to writing op ed pieces on his website that focused on his view of life and often he would comment on world events. He was a Catholic and his faith was a very important part of his life. He adored his wife Chaz the way that men are supposed to adore their wife and in a cynical age with divorce rates being sky high it was refreshing to see how devoted he and his wife were to each other. Additionally, his wife was African American and with all the recent talk about who has the "right" to get married it is worth mentioning that at one time not too long ago in America interracial marriage was seen as something that was abominable. Roger and Chaz are an inspiration because they were a constant reminder of how love is the only key for a marriage to be meaningful and successful. Roger was also very much liberal on many political issues and his opinion pieces about world events were often accurate. More then being labeled as a simple "liberal" Roger was a free thinker who was not afraid to express his thoughts about films and the world at large based on his life experiences, his Catholic faith and his desire to see us all try to be decent towards each other. Roger was the only film critic who's reviews I would respect without question even if I did not agree with them. This was a man that I realize as I am writing this that I deeply admired and respected. The word "hero" is a loaded term that is thrown around way too easily in our society today. In many respects Roger Ebert is absolutely a hero of mine! As a film professor Roger's thoughts and writings on film have been hugely influential on me and he would have been one of the people that I would have most wanted to meet in the world today. I am saddened by this loss and can only be grateful that Roger changed the way that people look at the film critic. In short thank you Roger.
http://www.imdb.com/news/ni50555553/?ref_=hm_nw_tp_t1
Disney Sucks!
http://games.yahoo.com/blogs/plugged-in/disney-shuts-down-lucasarts-194516133.html
Disney has decided to essentially eliminate Lucas Arts and use the name as a way to allow other gamemakers to make games for them while using the LucasArts title to sell those games. This is a massive side effect that George Lucas is 100% responsible for! This time thanks to the sale to Disney he cost a lot of people their job and essentially let an excellent company be destroyed. This is a terible day for video games. I am livid at Disney for doing this becuase they took the easy way out from a business persepctive. Ratehr then use this compnay and reinvent it to make moeny off of it they took the cheap fix. Essentialy lay off everybody and license it out. Absolute disgrace. They did the same thing with The Clone Wars series! Thanks George for allwoign Disney to essentially steal your franchise for a pultry amount of money and then let itcost a lot of hardworking people their jobs. Is Industrail Light and Magic next?
Disney has decided to essentially eliminate Lucas Arts and use the name as a way to allow other gamemakers to make games for them while using the LucasArts title to sell those games. This is a massive side effect that George Lucas is 100% responsible for! This time thanks to the sale to Disney he cost a lot of people their job and essentially let an excellent company be destroyed. This is a terible day for video games. I am livid at Disney for doing this becuase they took the easy way out from a business persepctive. Ratehr then use this compnay and reinvent it to make moeny off of it they took the cheap fix. Essentialy lay off everybody and license it out. Absolute disgrace. They did the same thing with The Clone Wars series! Thanks George for allwoign Disney to essentially steal your franchise for a pultry amount of money and then let itcost a lot of hardworking people their jobs. Is Industrail Light and Magic next?
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
HOLLYWOOD BLOCKBUSTER CLASS PLEASE READ
NO CLASS TOMORROW NIGHT FOR MY WEDNESDAY NIGHT HOLLYWOOD BLOCKBUSTER CLASS. Tomorrow night April 3 Monday classes are meeting and as such we have no class until Wednesday April 10. See you all then and the paper will be due on that day and not tomorrow!
Monday, April 1, 2013
Night At The Museum
For some reason I just never got around to watching Night at the Museum. I am a Ben Stiller fan thinking that this film was going to be exclusively for children I kind of held off on watching it. Normally I watch all kinds of movies and this being a"kid" movie would not normally be a deterrent but nevertheless I finally watched this movie over the weekend and I have to say that this was an excellent family film! The humor was good, the story worked well enough and this film had all the makings of a classic family film. It is easy to take the special effects in a film like this for granted but they were done exceptionally well. The T-Rex was flawless as was the miniaturization of Owen Wilson and Steve Coogan. The cast of characters in the movie was great and it was nice to see so many familiar faces in the movie. In it's own cooky way this film touched upon a lot of very important historical and scientific concepts. It also seem to encourage children to further explore these concepts which as a teacher made me smile. I am also a massive fan of the museum of Natural History and as a kid the place filled me with awe. This film hopefully was able to inspire that same feeling in children and being able to make history come alive is a great thing. Ben Stiller is probably the most consistent mainstream comedic movie star and I was very impressed with this film. It was certainly fun in every respect and in many ways was similar to another family film called "Jumanji." I really liked this film!
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