Monthly Archives: August 2007

Entirely Unnecessary Remake Alert: Sleuth

August 31, 2007
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Entirely Unnecessary Remake Alert: Sleuth

When I heard that Kenneth Branagh was doing a remake of Sleuth, the interesting but overblown and somewhat asinine adaptation of Anthony Shaffer’s play of the same name, brought to film in 1972 by director Joseph L. Mankiewicz, it seemed likely to be another Entirely Unnecessary Remake, like the Jude Law film of Alfie and all the silly remakes of 1970s and ’80s horror films such as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and Halloween. Even more warning was the fact that since his first film, an excellent adaptation of Shakespeare’s Henry V (itself an Entirely Unnecessary Remake of Lawrence Olivier’s impressive 1946 production), Branagh has done little that was interesting or even competent, either as an actor or as a director.

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Buster Keaton Featured Today

August 30, 2007
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Buster Keaton Featured Today

Turner Classic Movies features one of the greatest filmmakers of all time today: Buster Keaton. Here’s a link to my Weekly Standard essay on Keaton, which is available to subscribers only, alas. Here’s a link to my American Culture essay on Keaton’s missed opportunities.  Among the Keaton films scheduled for broadcast on TCM today and tomorrow, all of the silent ones up through 1928 are very good, great, or classic. I most highly recommend Cops; Sherlock, Jr.; Steamboat Bill, Jr.; The General; and The Navigator. Here’s the TCM Keaton lineup for today and tomorrow:

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Richards Stones Reviewer

August 29, 2007
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Richards Stones Reviewer

Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards has written a letter demanding that two Swedish newspapers apologize to the band and its Swedish fans for publishing a very negative review of an August 3 Rolling Stones concert in Gothenberg, Sweden. The review said Richards looked "very drunk" at the performance. Now, there’s a shocker.

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“September Dawn” a Disaster—for Studio and Filmmakers

August 28, 2007
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“September Dawn” a Disaster—for Studio and Filmmakers

Film critic and social commentator Michael Medved had a point recently when he observed that Hollywood has little interest in depicting Muslim terrorists, which are of course the big threat of our time, and instead typically characterizing terrorists as Caucasians. In an article for USA Today, Medved noted that this is especially absurd in the wake of the 911 attacks: Since 2001′s devastating attacks, big studios have released numerous movies with terrorists as part of the plot, including Sum of All Fears, Red Eye, Live Free or Die Hard, The Bourne Ultimatum and many more, but virtually all of them show terrorists as Europeans or Americans with no Islamic connections. Even historically based thrillers downplay Muslim terrorism: Steven Spielberg’s Munich spends more than 80% of its running time showing Israelis as killers and Palestinians as victims, while Oliver Stone’s World Trade Center highlights the aftermath of the attacks with no depiction of those who perpetrated them. United 93 stands out among recent releases in showing Islamic killers in acts of terror — and it would be hard to tell that story without portraying the suicidal hijackers.

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Dylan, Costello to Tour Together

August 28, 2007
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Dylan, Costello to Tour Together

One of the most influential popular artists of our time will join one of the most important  songwriter-performers of the 1970s for a brief concert tour of the U.S. east coast this fall, as Bob Dylan and Elvis Costello get together for thirteen performances. More info is available at the official Bob Dylan website, here.

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The Important Theme of “No Reservations”

August 27, 2007
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The Important Theme of “No Reservations”

With Superbad at number 1 at the movie box office for the second week in a row and not much else changing in the cinemas, and only two notable new movies—Mr. Bean’s Holiday, which I’m looking forward to seeing, and War, a Jet Li/Jason Statham actioner which I also mean to see but haven’t yet managed to fit into the sched), it’s a good time to look at a film that’s been in the theaters for a few weeks already. No Reservations, the drama starring Catherine Zeta-Jones, Aaron Eckhart, and Abigail Breslin, got mediocre reviews, but I rather liked it. (On the other hand, I saw it the weekend it was released but haven’t got around to writing about it until now.) Most of the negativity centered on complaints of the film’s predictability, which typically means that the reviewer didn’t find it very interesting but does not know why.

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Spike TV’s “The Kill Point”

August 25, 2007
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Spike TV’s “The Kill Point”

Season 1 of the Spike TV series The Kill Point concludes tonight with a two-hour episode. It’s a fairly engaging series about a bank robbery gone bad that results in deaths and a drawn-out hostage situation (with very strong performances by Donnie Wahlberg and John Leguizamo), though it’s nothing essential, by any means. There is, however, one interesting angle. The robbers/hostage takers are a former platoon of U.S. soldiers back in country after their tours are over. The leader (Leguizamo) is a former sergeant who was court-martialed after he refused to send his men into a particular site in Iraq. After his refusal, the higher-ups sent another platoon, and they were all killed. So instead of being considered a hero for saving his men and warning of disaster, he’s been made the fall guy for their catastrophic mistake.

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Another Try at Genre-Bending

August 24, 2007
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Another Try at Genre-Bending

The mixing of genres can be interesting when it works, but when it doesn’t, it’s usually a disaster. The producers of the forthcoming CBS TV primetime series, Viva Laughlin, based on the BBC series Viva Blackpool, will see if they can avoid the shoals. The series will feature mystery-suspense plots augmented with musical-theater sequences, the network has revealed. USA Today explains:

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Debunking Economic Myths

August 23, 2007
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Debunking Economic Myths

As promised earlier today, here is my review of Alan Reynolds’s book, Income and Wealth, which appeared in the June 2007 issue of Budget and Tax News: Income and Wealth By Alan Reynolds Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2006 231 pages, $55.00, ISBN 0-313-33688-1 The past decade has brought a tsunami of complaints about increasing economic inequality in the United States, a "vanishing middle class," and a huge and increasing concentration of wealth among the top 1 percent of wage earners. As Alan Reynolds points out in his superb new book Income and Wealth, those claims are false. Every one of them.  

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The Greatness of Alan Reynolds

August 23, 2007
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The Greatness of Alan Reynolds

In his syndicated column, William F. Buckley pays tribute today to Alan Reynolds, the Cato Institute economist who has defended free markets for nearly four decades. Reynolds has published hundreds of articles in newspapers and magazines, notably in The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, Reason, National Review,and in national syndication. His devotion to facts instead of ideology has made him a huge thorn in the statists’ side during his entire career. He is also an immensely cheerful and personable gentleman. (And he once played guitar in rock star Little Richard’s band. How many economists have done that?) Recently Reynolds wrote his first full-length book, Income and Wealth, in which, in his usual way, he demolishes the great statist myths of our time. As Buckey notes:

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A Good Overview of the Harry Potter Books

August 22, 2007
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I’ve seen a multitude of interpretations of the Harry Potter book series, and for me the most interesting ones emphasize the ideas in the narratives, instead of arguing over the books’ literary quality. (The latter seems to me a moot point.) One of the best brief summaries I’ve seen is Jerry Bowyer’s, published today. An excerpt: Jo Rowling has a wonderful talent for tapping into Biblical and literary symbolism. From the very beginning, I’ve believed that Hogwarts is the literary representation of the Christian Church. Towered over by stone spires, filled with living icons of great men and women from the past, Hogwarts is a place where ancient books are studied to relearn great wisdom from the past. Hogwarts was founded by four great wizards over a thousand years ago who were united in the belief that their knowledge should be passed on. Like the four evangelists in early church literature, each has its own seals and symbol and its own special focus of virtue. Many of those wonderful names, such as Godric Gryffindor, Rowling revealed in a recent interview were, taken from medieval Christian saints. The full article is available here. 

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Dark “Oz” Film Planned

August 21, 2007
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Dark “Oz” Film Planned

Normally I hate revisionism, but this looks like it just might work: Warner Bros. and Village Roadshow Pictures are teaming on "Oz," a revisionist take on the L. Frank Baum books that hatched "The Wizard of Oz." . . . "The appealing thing about the Baum books to me is how wildly imaginative they are. There are crazy characters from amazing places. I want this to be ‘Harry Potter’ dark, not ‘Seven’ dark." . . . "A lot of the plot is mine, but the characters are all Baum." —from Variety  The film’s prospective director, Todd McFarlane, wants it to appeal to the same audiences that enjoyed the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. If the authors continue to respect the source material, the film could conceivably serve, as they say they intend, as an effective sequel to the original, rather than a remake. We’ll see.

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