Thursday, May 26, 2011

COMING SOON: BEING HUMAN IS OVERRATED, BUT THE BBC SERIES ISN'T.

So a vampire, a werewolf and a ghost walk into a bar...

If that sounds like the beginning of a joke, it's not.  It's actually something that could happen in an episode of Being Human, the BBC series I've been Netflixing the hell out of in my endeavors to keep myself entertained while on the treadmill.  

In my next post, I'll give you a quick breakdown of the series (starring Aidan Turner, Russell Tovey and Lenora Crichlow) that, so far into the first season (where I currently am), has managed to bring some new life into yet another story about the undead.

Though it may not reinvent the genre, it manages to sweetly, intelligently, humorously and often movingly bring some refreshing perspectives by having a vampire and his werewolf pal rent a flat together that's haunted by a ghost.  Blood is spilled, myths are shattered, questions of mortality (and immortality) are raised, and intriguing  dynamics ensue as three former humans ponder the essence of their humanity once they no longer have it.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Game of Thrones (or: Season of the Bad Hair)


 Been stocking up all these episodes of Game of Thrones on my DVR and couldn't wait to finally start watching them. (For those of you who don't know, this action/fantasy/sword-fighting dramatic epic HBO series is based on a hugely popular and successful series of novels by George R.R. Martin.)

Husband and I got to it too late the other night, so I knew we'd never finish an entire episode without his snores joining the soundtrack.  But here's what I have to say thus far -- sometimes even with the volume all the way up, their dialogue was difficult to understand (which may've been due to the various accents, or the fact that a lot of these words/names/places are fictional and unrecognizable, but you hear them and THINK you were supposed to recognize it, so you keep going back and listening over and over, saying "what the hell did he say? who are they talking about? only to realize -- d'oh! it's not a real place, nor a name or word we've heard before, so no wonder we're confused!  it's new information, and fictitious at that!) and we had to go back a few times to try and figure out what was being said.

I know there's a lot, I mean A FREAKIN' LOT, of exposition that had to be gone through to set up this world and the bazillion interwoven back stories of all the characters, so I am being patient.   And when I say these characters come more with baggage than back-story, that is a serious understatement.  It does seem like it will ultimately be a compelling and very cool story.

And it seems well-cast (Not loving Lena Headey as the queen yet, which bums me out, because I loved her in 300, and after initial ambivalence, grew to like her a lot in the tv series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles; Sean Bean has a great commanding presence, and brings a lot of depth to what could so easily be a one-dimensional macho, warrior/patriarch; and as always Peter Dinklage manages to make his dwarf perhaps the most compelling of all the characters, and his performance never ceases to surprise.) There are several young faces unfamiliar to most American viewers, and I suspect this will turn out to be a career-changer for some of them.  A couple of the youngest actors have a ton of charisma and really hold the screen against their more-seasoned co-stars.

That being said, the actors couldn't do such a good job without good writing, and despite the heavy load of necessary exposition, it is intelligently written and pleasantly free of so many cliches that usually bog down this particular genre.  You can tell that it is driving somewhere, and it makes you wanna slog through the mucky trenches of all this set-up to get to that destination.  And that is also owing to some great work by the various directors.

But... can we talk about the hair???

Yes, people, the hair FUCKING MATTERS.  You spend all that money on those gorgeous costumes and those sets... and you shoot in obscenely cinematic locations in Ireland and Malta, and then, what, you get the worst wigs in the history of wigs?

Or just bad dye jobs? Bad extensions...? Just. Plain. Bad.

Honestly, the hair looks so misplaced on some characters that it is beyond asking me to suspend my disbelief.  It totally took me out of the story, that's how distracting it is.  Sigh. 

Not that I'll stop watching... 

***Note -- we have now watched three episodes.  We had to pause a few times to review their web of dysfunctional relationships -- "Wait, he killed whose father? Then he fucked whose sister? Then they stole the throne and she married the king but now they're fucking each other while so-and-so is stabbing so-and-so in the back..."  --  before continuing on with our viewing, because so much of this series is about what happened BEFORE the series began. Everything here is context, at this point.  The plots and machinations are meaningless, unless you understand their various histories with one another.  But let me say -- as I suspected and mentioned above, it is turning out to be quite compelling.  And dark.  And really, despite it being about kingdoms and sword-fights, and all the various shifting alliances... it is fundamentally a big, messy family saga of the darkest kind, with love of family and love of power battling it out.  The characters are well-drawn and complex, the acting gets better with each episode as everyone seems to be settling in, and yes -- there is incest and fantastical, darkly supernatural forces hovering on the horizon.... It's ALMOST enough to get me past the issue with the hair... Maybe in another ep or two I won't even notice anymore... Maybe.****

******Second Note (5/26/11) -- yes, I am fully addicted now.  And happy to say, I am  thoroughly enjoying Lena Headey's performance.  Guess it took me a while to stop seeing her as Sarah Connor.  And fortunately, because it's not TV... it's HBO!, you can get the episodes On Demand so you can quickly get brought up to speed.  This show is the REAL Brothers and Sisters, and makes the familial dynamics in that soon-to-be-dead Calista Flockhart vehicle seem utterly boring by comparison.  Get through those first two eps... and you will love this.***

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Wasn't Knocked Out by the Hammer of "Thor"


A few words about the Saturday night cinematic event that was utterly non-eventful... 




Bizarrely lackluster, and directed with an unexpected lack of the unexpected.  Oh Kenneth Branagh, where art thou? To which realm hast thine (thy??) creativity been banished? 


Good cast.  All did their best with a disappointingly average script.  Ray Stevenson, who was FUCKING FANTASTIC, in the now-defunct HBO Series, Rome, is entertaining as always, though totally under-utilized and unable to show his surprisingly staggering range. Same goes for Idris Elba, whom I still worship since his days on another brilliant but gone HBO series: The Wire.  I should also add that I found Chris Hemsworth charming and charismatic as Thor, but really still have no idea what he's capable of as an actor after playing this narrowly drawn character who's given zero opportunity for subtlety.  As for Oscar-winner Natalie Portman...? Well, this film is the ultimate proof of her range -- she can not only play complicated multi-faceted characters, but also characters that require so little depth that they can be played by any number of people and it wouldn't have made a difference.  (Though I suppose between this film and her earlier one -- which I just REFUSED to spend $$ on -- with Ashton Kutcher, No Strings Attached, she has achieved the right to say "See?  I do have a lighter side!" And maybe that was the point...? That and the right to say she worked with Branagh on his least interesting project?  Just looking for an explanation here....)


Now if you really wanna see Branagh do good work, rent the British tv series: Wallander, in which he plays an emotionally fraying Swedish detective.  Sounds cliche, but he gives it a ton of complexity.  It's based on a series of novels about the same character.  I'd never heard of the novels prior to renting the series on netflix, but apparently they're quite well known outside of America. 


Also, if you rent the series, you'll catch Tom Hiddleston, the actor who plays Thor's brother Loki in the film.  In Wallander, he plays one of Branagh's character's co-workers, and you'll barely be able to tell it's the same guy.  Probably Branagh's best move was casting this guy.


In terms of the kids -- wouldn't bring 'em, at least not any under the age of 12. (Especially not with what movie tickets cost these days.  Just ain't worth it.)  My 7 yr old was occasionally frightened (though granted, he's a pretty sensitive kid), but both he and my 10 yr old daughter were fidgety and bored and frequently asked if it was almost over.  They seemed annoyed at us, like we mislead them into thinking we were going to see a cool action film about a cool superhero, and instead, we'd tricked them into a movie for "grownups."  The pacing was uneven and there were several tangible lags, even for my husband and myself, and we're big fans of the superhero genre.


Just kinda wondering... what the hell happened. 


Not a horrible film, but seriously -- you could wait for the DVD, watch it in your living room, and you'd be a lot less annoyed with it.  


So bummed.  Had higher expectations, as Miller and Stentz are excellent writers and also great guys.  And Branagh...?  He's capable of brilliance.  


Looks like he coulda used a bolt of inspirational lightning on this one, and it never came...


Sigh. 

Thursday, May 19, 2011

"Soul Surfer" -- One of the best sports movies. EVER.

and without a doubt
THE BEST FEMALE SPORTS MOVIE
I personally can remember seeing


When you "preview" (ie my infamous "Coming Soon" quasi-posts) an upcoming film review --

Wait --  Stop right there. 

I need to clarify -- I'm not entirely happy with the term "review." At least not for the purposes of this blog.  These things will be more my... feelings and observations.  My... reactions and responses.  Let's go with that, shall we?  I don't want to put myself forth as a professional film critic. 

Quite the opposite, actually.  I like to think of myself as just a viewer.  And an amateur viewer, at that.  I like to pretend that I never worked in this business -- insofar as my ability to view television programs and films is still (hopefully) the same as before I began working behind the camera as a writer, producer and director.  I try to watch without a critical eye, and more of an open mind and heart... Hope that makes sense.  I guess when I view TV and film, I like to return to the days when it was a magical experience that transported me out of my own life for a little while... an experience that was so miraculously transformative that it instilled in me a passion that ultimately guided me to my chosen career.  So, with that said...here we go again:

When you preview an upcoming discussion of your reaction to a film by using the words "One of the Best..." followed up by "Ever," you kinda gotta get the follow-up out there into the world quickly so that your praise doesn't vanish into the ether like hyperbolic smoke you're blowing just to get attention.

You need to get to the specifics. You need to back up your (subjective but utterly valid!) opinion with evidence of your passion and some kind of explanation.

For those of you who've read my other blog and guest posts, you already know that a want for words isn't my problem.  But at this blog, I will endeavor to get to my points quickly.  These aren't the ravings of my subconscious -- these are my attempts to encourage you to see a particular film or TV show.  And mind you, no one is paying me to do this, so I have nothing to gain except that I think it's critically urgent that good work is supported because 1: it's good work, and 2: it perpetuates the possibility of more good work being done.  It shows that audiences aren't utterly vapid and still long for and appreciate smart, artistic and entertaining enterprises that say something and touch us.

In this particular case, it's Soul Surfer.  And because it's already been in release for a little while, I feel compelled to get this post published asap so some of you can still catch it before it leaves the theaters.

I freely admit that I had never read any reviews from this film prior to seeing it.  (Nor the book, also entitled Soul Surfer, which I hear is incredible, and I intend to buy it immediately for my 9 yr old daughter.)  But as there is so little for kids and tweens out there in the multiplexes, all I needed was to hear from one or two moms that "the shark bite thing" is "really quick and not too scary" and that was pretty much that.

In case you don't know -- Soul Surfer is based on the true story of Bethany Hamilton, the young woman who made news headlines back in 2003 when the then thirteen year old's arm was bitten off by a shark while she was surfing off the coast of Hawaii, where she and her family live.  The miracle was not only that she survived... but eventually returned to competitive surfing.  Though I didn't see any of the interviews she gave at the time, it had somehow reached the cultural consciousness that here was a kid with an inner strength and spirit and will far beyond her years. 

But what this movie depicts so movingly and inspiringly (if that isn't a real word, I don't care -- it fits) is that her strength and spirit and will aren't just beyond her years, they're beyond any years.  They are beyond being defined in relation to her age or gender.  Here, quite simply, is a human being who refused to be trounced by the odds, who refused to surrender anything more than the limb stolen from her, and ultimately triumphed in every conceivable way.  And though the movie isn't what I would call perfect, and some moments in the script are weak or predictable, these flaws are far overshadowed by its strengths.

Helen Hunt and Dennis Quaid play Bethany's parents, two life-long surfers whose relationship seems almost suspiciously healthy and happy as they instill strong Christian values and a love of surfing in their three children: two sons and youngest daughter Bethany... who is portrayed as being at least as comfortable in the water as out of it, and began surfing competitively at the age of 8.  And admittedly, I was skeptical.   The "screenwriter" in me was like -- oooh, here we go -- set them up as happy, then watch them fall apart when the shit hits the fan.  And the "realist" in me was like, "yeah, right! a family that gets along so well! c'mon!"  But I tried to drown out all those voices and just settle in and ride the wave... (sorry, had to do it.. couldn't help myself) and anyway, who knows -- maybe a family that lives in a gorgeous place like Hawaii and shares a common passion (like surfing) really does have a great relationship.  But frankly, all this stuff can be overlooked because the stuff that works well in this movie makes you forget anything that could be perceived as cheesy.

So from here, I'm going to skip most of the plot analysis, because it can be boiled down to this: up-and-coming surfer is bitten by shark, faces challenges in overcoming life with only one arm, hits some seriously rough patches -- physically, emotionally and spiritually -- trying to return to first some semblance of normalcy, then surfing, but ultimately succeeds.  Throughout this, we see her friends, family and community pull together in support of Bethany as she recovers, the compassionate suffering of these same friends and family as they feel for Bethany's plight, and of course (in addition to the shark) there is a sort of "villain" in the piece, a powerful and aggressive surfer who is seen as Bethany's greatest rival on the surfing circuit.  (PS -- the fact that Bethany could have been a male surfer and the story would not have changed ONE BIT is key to its sheer awesomeness).

This is all sort of (forgive me, Bethany) standard story-structure stuff.  But it's not the structure that makes this film outstanding.  Once again, it's not a story, but how it's told.  Yes, folks, it's all in the delivery of it.  But really, because this is a true story, it's all in the LIVING of it.  Which Bethany Hamilton continues to do.  And does it so much better than the rest of us, and in such a way that rather than making us feel inferior, she makes us want to do better, to be better.  She shows us what humanity can be at its best... and also, how athletics and sports can often be the way in which this can be achieved and demonstrated.  For more proof of this, you can visit Bethany at her website.

So here, in short, are some of the noteworthy things that make this film work so damn well: 

The portayal of Bethany's relationship with Alana Blanchard (played with an appealing genuineness by Lorraine Nicholson), a life-long friend and fellow surfer .  And this is one of the places where the movie begins to show just how unique and extraordinary it is... by deftly treating something as ordinary.  Here are two attractive young girls and there is no cattiness, no pettiness; they are not boy crazy, slutty, overly preoccupied by their clothes or appearances.  Their friendship is solid.  And they tackle some truly challenging moments with maturity and caring.  NO ONE portrays women, especially young ones, like that.  With such realism, with such a lack of scandal.  With such an utter lack of melodrama and artifice.  And this film does it WITH EASE.  Such ease that everyone else who distorts adolescent girls into sit-com idiots should be ASHAMED. (Are you listening, Nick and Disney??  I know my kids love your tv programs, but seriously? This is the best you can do??)

And here is where this becomes one of the best female sports movies... EVER.  Alana and Bethany share a passion for surfing.  And yet....their gender is never made a big deal of.  We see men and women surfing throughout this film, and the fact that they are women is almost never mentioned. They are simply SURFERS.  They are athletes.  Their triumphs and their failures and their challenges are never attributed to their genders.  We see them work their asses off.  But no one ever says: Wow, I'm a girl, so I have to work twice as hard! Whoa is me! (And you can bet your life that Bethany Hamilton never says it).  No one ever says: Wow, she surfs really well, and she's a girl! Who'd a thunk it????

After Bethany loses her arm one day (the specifics of which I will get to in a moment, just for those parents deciding whether or not it's appropriate for their kids) while out surfing with Alana and Alana's father (nicely played by Kevin Sorbo) and her brother, her biggest concern is not "can I surf again?" but "when can I surf again?"  It never enters her mind to give up her greatest joy.  Needless to say, but I'll say it anyway, there are scenes that show the difficulties Bethany has trying to do the most basic of things with only one arm -- making lunch, getting dressed... putting her hair into a ponytail -- but none of it is done melodramatically.  This is simply the reality of her new situation.  And her frustration is understandable.  Here was a very independent girl who suddenly needs help.  And she'll be damned if she'll ask for it.

As powerfully portrayed by the talented actress Annasophia Robb, Bethany never plays the victim... rarely takes a moment to pity herself... so when she does finally breakdown in bewilderment as to why God has let this happen to her, questioning how this could be his "plan" for her... her Church's youth leader Sarah (played with a believable sweetness by Carrie Underwood) admits that she simply doesn't know.  And that, too, is great.  There are no pat answers or melodramatic monologues here.  There are no hysterics, either.  (Though occasionally some of the parents' dialogue and interactions are  unfortunately stereotypical and predictable).  People face their realities, and bravely.  Not that they aren't fearful or scared... but they persist.  And that is bravery.  Not lacking fear, but continuing on in spite of it. 

Since everyone knows that Bethany does indeed return to the world of surfing, I don't consider mentioning that fact a spoiler.  The joy and beauty of this film is in watching how she gets there.  In seeing her travel to Thailand after the tsunami to help others in need.  To seeing the journey she takes, spiritually and physically. 

Her will to not only surf, but to excel at it, would humble any pro athlete, though no doubt they would understand it.  What Soul Surfer does is remind us that the best athletes aren't just examples of strong bodies with a superior skill set; the best athletes have incredible will-power and faith in themselves, faith in a work ethic and discipline -- that if you put in the time and effort, you'll reap a reward, whereas so many other people simply quit before they begin, psyching themselves out with: "It's too hard, it's not possible..." and other similarly self-defeating thoughts (aka excuses.)

See this movie, and you will find it hard to utter those words again, to entertain those thoughts, without feeling at least a twinge of shame.

So -- at this point, until someone reminds me of another film, I'm calling Soul Surfer the greatest movie about a female athlete EVER, because it isn't about a female athlete at all.  It's about an incredible surfer who touches everyone she meets and makes them want to be better people -- man or woman, boy or girl.  Who does better and more with one arm than most people do with two. 

And it is one of the greatest sports movies ever because it portrays what the rigors and discipline of athletics can do to raise us up, to create and foster a believe in one's self.   Not to be better athletes, or to triumph at a particular sport, but to simply BE the best that we can be -- as a species.

***Now, for those parents curious about "the shark bite thing," here's my quick take: you barely see the shark coming.  The minutes before the incident are not fraught with tension.  You won't be uncomfortably on the edge of your seat the entire time.  And when it happens... you glimpse the shark... and then -- it's gone.  But -- there is a fair amount of blood in the water.  I have a child who cannot stand the sight of blood, and this was tough for her.  But they don't focus on the injury to her body... It isn't graphic.  However, the next few minutes are quite tense as they race to the hospital to save her. And if you have very sensitive kids, as I do, watching the stress on her family and friends, and watching Bethany finally lose consciousness after a valiant fight to stay calm and alert, is fairly upsetting.  And then... it's over.  She comes through... but without an arm.  

My advice is to discuss this all with your kids ahead of time.  To take them through it step by step BEFORE seeing the film.  Unlike adults, they'll still wanna see it and won't feel like you've ruined it for them.  Though my kids were definitely freaked out by the whole thing, that was counterbalanced by how great the film was and how Bethany succeeds in the end.  (something I also mentioned beforehand, ie "Don't worry, she ends up being better than fine and becomes a kick-ass surfer in real life.  Seriously.  You'll see!") My kids worried they'd have nightmares... but by the next day, they didn't even mention it.  So my take?  It's well worth it. My son is 6 and my daughter is 9.  I know of other 6 yr olds who saw it as well, and they still loved the film.  My advice -- see this film.*****

And if you've missed this in the theaters -- see it on DVD.  You'll be glad you did.  You have no idea of the impact it might have on you or your children.  But odds are, its lessons will stay with all of you, long after it fades out.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

BLUE CRUSH (or -- when hollywood calls, why do I answer the phone??)

So I was totally busy, minding my own business, trying to write up a more complete, yet still brief review/discussion of Soul Surfer (because it is amazing, as my last quasi-post suggested) (but the bummer with brevity is that it often takes longer to write something short and eloquent yet efficient in its use of language than it does to write some rambling diatribe... ahem, yes, that would be me -- which is why one of my favorite quotes, by Mark Twain, goes something like this: If I'd had more time, I'd have written a shorter letter."), when my phone rings.

It's Hollywood. 

Okay, it's my manager.  Whose office is in Hollywood. 

Okay, technically his office is in Beverly Hills.  But whatever - it feels like Hollywood is calling... like a siren trying to dash me on the rocks... again... and despite my recently having relocated with my family to Western Pennsyltucky... I still can hear its seductive call across the miles...  I think I need psychic earplugs. 

So he says to me "Hey listen, they're thinking of doing a sequel to Blue Crush and I think you'd be perfect to write it. You interested?"

Ummm... Duh? 

Why?  Because it's good $, and in some weird twist of kismet, I have been totally inpsired by another surfing film with a female protagonist... as mentioned above. So basically I AM ALL OVER THIS SHIT.

So my manager's like: What sample should we send them? (He means which of my scripts would serve as ample proof that, like, I can write this movie.) Something with "girl power" and "action" he tells me.

He tells me "It doesn't have to be a feature (film) script.  I'll even submit something you did for tv."

He leaves me with a "think about it and get back to me."

I hang up... and sigh.  My old reaction, before I learned how fucked up this whole business is, was to hang up the phone and jump up and down... like..."I actually have a shot at this!  How fucking cool! Yay, my dreams have come true! I am doing what I love love fucking love!!!  I can't believe it!  When so many other people have jobs they loathe... I actually might get paid to follow my passion, follow my bliss... Yay for me! Life is beautiful!" And my naive little heart would be pumping pumping pumping... the adrenaline surging through my clear and as-yet-unclogged-by-cynicism (aka acknowledgement of reality) veins...

But now... I sigh heavily.  Because -- fuck.  I don't have a good sample.  Thus, I don't have a prayer.

What I have are various things that each have an element of what these people are looking for... and taken together, you could see (if you could be bothered to, like, think a little independently and extrapolate a bit....) that I am more than capable of doing this thing.

My most recent gigs were for a big studio, writing sequels to two well-known films:  a hugely successful chick-flick comedy focusing on the marital mishaps of women in their 30s, and an iconic love story with supernatural elements shot two decades ago...

So far, neither of my sequels have been produced.  And as the division of the studio that hired me to write these films has been closed down and the people fired, their projects now shuttled to yet another division, my scripts are no doubt languishing on the new guy's hard-drive.  More likely, the new guy's assistant's hard-drive... while the new guy tries to mark his shaky and probably temporary turf by peeing all over it with material that he and "his people" generate, rather than looking at stuff that was developed by the very smart and talented previous guy and his fabulous team.

Before those two scripts?  I did an indie romantic comedy with characters in their 30s.

And before that?  Lots and lots of TV.  Most recently, genre stuff.  Sci-Fi and action.  I'd like to be specific, but I'd also like to stay married... to my current husband.  And if I name these shows, it won't be too hard to google and IMDb your way to the name under which I wrote these things... ie you will know who I am... thereby knowing who my husband and kids are... thereby... big marriage problem.

So yesterday, after doing what I was never able to only a few years ago -- namely, forgetting all about this as I had to run my errands, and finish up yesterday's post for Righteous Venting and put the finishing touches on my guest post at The Scarlet Dogma and volunteer at my kids' school (because normally I would've dropped EVERYFUCKINGTHING to find just the right sample, doing everything short of, like, taking crack so I could WRITE a new sample in like 47 minutes, and I would've obsessed over this entire situation) -- I get home and take a deep breath and have to acknowledge that --

I WILL NOT GET THIS JOB. DON'T STAND A FUCKING CHANCE IN HELL. SHOULD I EVEN BOTHER, SHOULD I EVEN WASTE ONE IOTA OF MY TIME TRYING TO FIND A SAMPLE WHICH I KNOW WON'T DEMONSTRATE EXACTLY WHAT THEY'RE LOOKING FOR?

Because insanely, Hollywood tries to make this an exact science. They want to see my "other" chick surfing movie in order to know that I can write a chick surfing movie. Or a chick swimming movie to see that I can possibly extend my creative reach all the way over to chick surfing movie... They can't look at my body of work, full of strong female characters and lots of so-called female "bonding" and also filled with dynamic female characters who talk tough and kick-ass just as well as the male characters... and realize that I can write their damn movie.

And yet... I will now publish this post... and go into my basement... (my real basement, not a metaphor for my external hard-drive or some deep recesses of my soul) and look through some old tv scripts and see which one I can send.  And most likely, they're from an older computer and an older screenwriting program and I may be fucked and not even have them saved anywhere accessible... so I might have to scan in the pages to make a pdfuckingf file... which I will then email to my manager.

And then... I will promptly forget about it.  Hopefully.

But I guess I still have to try... I think... Because this addiction is a little too hard to kick. Because even though the business of it all is an utter, soul-sucking nightmare, I love the work itself, the creative parts of what I do, or what I used to do more often.  Because seeing a good film still inspire and moves me.  Because I haven't yet decided that screenwriting is a thing of my past. Because even as I type this, I have at least two or three new scripts in various stages on my (real, not metaphorical) hard drive.

But -- none of them is done. And none of them is about a female surfer.

And so once again, I am about to get my hopes (Blue) crushed.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

COMING SOON: "Soul Surfer" -- One of the best sports movies. EVER.

Not a chick sports movie, but a bonafide, who-gives-a-damn-about-the-gender-of-the-athlete full-on triumph over adversity, mind and spirit over body, unbelievably inspirational sports film. Make that unbelievable FILM. Unbelievable story.  Period.

Bethany Hamilton -- a true hero who reminds us what the best of humanity looks like. And from where I'm sitting, humanity never looked better than it does with one arm.

Friday, May 13, 2011

In A Better World -- Part 1

You know what’s frustrating??  I’ll tell you what’s frustrating – seeing a film so remarkable and astonishing that you just CANNOT WAIT to tell EVERYONE YOU KNOW all about it, which in turn will cause them to go see it and support an astounding piece of work…. Only to discover that when you try to articulate your astonishment in written form, you find yourself utterly inarticulate.  Unequal to the task of being eloquent about something that is so beyond eloquent that it is depressingly above your pay-grade.  Ooooh, I am not worthy!

This is how I feel as I draft yet another pathetic attempt to do justice (or something that at least vaguely resembles justice) to the Danish film In A Better World, which was directed by Susanne Bier, and which won both the Oscar and Golden Globe for best foreign film.  

Perhaps I’m getting tripped up in the “written word” part.  Because if I’d walked out of the theater and bumped into you (as surely I would have, because I was so preoccupied by both its content and the elegance with which that content was expressed that I could barely function), I probably would have blurted out something like:

Holy shit. (respect-filled pause of reflection. then -- ) That movie was amazing. Amazing and glorious and gorgeous and so not the kind of shit that Hollywood would ever make.  Why?  Well for one thing, because it isn’t "clean" (ie contrived).   You can’t follow the dots of the story from a to b to c.   Love that!  Though by the end of the film, the pattern makes utter sense and nothing is random nor gratuitous, it’s also not entirely linear…. Which is what also makes it not the kind of thing Hollywood would manufacture. 

But WHAT THE FUCK IS IT ABOUT, you might be asking.  So, for you plot-hungry Americans, I will tell you.  (But just to be clear -- what it is “about” isn’t the same thing as “what happens.” And that is largely what makes it so un-Hollywood.)  However… you’ll have to wait until Part II of this post comes out.  ‘Cause right now I have to get back to flagellating myself for another pathetic attempt to artfully convey the essence of having been touched by this cinematic work of art.

More to come….

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Friday Night Lights, I Prepare Myself For Your Departure

****Note: This post first appeared on April 16, 2011 over at my other blog Righteous Venting. But due to its timeliness, and my continuing passion for the material, I felt it was exactly the right way in which to launch this new endeavor, which aims to celebrate those tv series and films gracing our screens which have defied the odds by being both entertainment and -- gasp! -- art.   To do this kind of work, that magical melding of art and entertainment, is exactly what inspired me to leave New York and move to Los Angeles to pursue a career as a screenwriter and director. 

If you measure success by employment, then I was successful for well over a decade.  But in the all-too-cliche battle to tell and sell stories that "mattered," that were more than mere forgettable, disposable, albeit profitable, distractions, I was increasingly being defeated.  Screw me and the naive horse I rode in on, I suppose.  But I'd left New York with dreams of being an artist, not a "success," much to my parents' chagrin.  (Although "successful artist" is a mantle I would have worn proudly.)  And after countless soul-killing, mind-numbing meetings with people who clearly were not interested in "art," I rode out on my now exhausted, beaten, cynical, pissed-off and depressed horse and headed back to NY, but only getting as far as the midwest, where I now continue to write scripts and consult and have found sanity through blogging.  And just when I've given up hope that good work can be done on television and in film, I see something revelatory.  Something that reminds me why I descended into the hell of L.A. in the first place.  Something that makes me say -- Damn, I wish I'd written that.  So if you need an example of what I'm talking about... read on....

This one has to be quick before my husband/parents/kids come looking for me (after a brief yet interesting stay at my in-laws' house in NJ -- more on that soon -- I'm now ensconced in my parents' home just outside NYC) and discover I'm typing away at my laptop, when I'm supposed to be "resting" (aka letting life pass me by) because I still can't quite shake this bronchitis thing.

So I got out of bed at like 1:30 pm today after Nyquil put me into a coma, plus I'm just plain ol' exhausted from this sickness kicking my ass, and felt utterly panicked. Where has the day gone? Instead of luxuriating in the knowledge that I actually got a decent night's sleep, I worried that I had missed something important.  And that's when the queasiness kicked in...and it wasn't the amoxicillin I'd just downed with some tea and matzah.  It was the feeling of impending loss, and worse -- the feeling that I somehow had been guilty of obliviousness about this impending loss until it was all right up in my grill.  As I searched my mental hard drive for the origin of this feeling, the grief began to wash over me -- because Friday Night Lights are about to be turned off forever.  After doing its final DirecTV run, this past Friday it began its concluding season on NBC.  And frankly, I guess I'm just not ready for the game to end, or, to screw the football metaphor,  I really don't want to say goodbye.

Not just because it's such a damn good -- nay, outfuckinstanding -- show, but because it represents a humongous victory... a rich, complex, intelligent, insightful, subtle and nuanced tv show that, like its scrappy characters, found a way to survive against tremendous odds. A show that managed to say so much about what it is to be human, what it is to be American, without standing on a soap box and preaching down to anyone.

Here's the thing -- you may not have watched this show because you assumed, fairly, that it's about "football," and, again fairly, you might not like football.  But do you like America?  Do you like being human in the 21st century (okay -- even if you don't, you're probably pretty invested in that concept, nonetheless)?  Do you care about witnessing one of the greatest portraits of American life ever to be done in any artistic medium?  Because if you do, then you should be watching Friday Night Lights. And not on NBC.  You should go back and rent the DVDs and start at the very beginning.  (Although if you're too lazy to get the DVDs, then by all means -- watch on NBC, and start right away.)

FNL is about an America that many of us live in (I don't; but see that's why my watching it is even more important, dare I say... essential), but few ever see, let alone discuss.  It's not the America everybody else scorns, mocks or hates -- unapologetically greedy, selfish, self-important, entitled, superficial, and immoral, where Real Housewives display their fake boobs and inflated lips.  It's not about the side of America that sometimes makes us hate ourselves, or at the very least, feel ashamed -- come on, lets admit it. Sometimes the most conspicuous parts of our culture are disgusting.

This is about the small, quiet places that make up the majority of our country, not the louder, flashier coasts and larger cities that somehow, misguidedly and inaccurately, represent WHO WE ARE as a nation and as a people.  This small dusty town with rusting cars and double-wide trailers is also home to a nobility and triumph of the human spirit. And if you thinking I'm being hyperbolic or maudlin, then clearly you haven't watched FNL.

Frankly, as one who worked in television for years (and yes, I will address that after I've returned from my spring fakation road trip and kicked this lung infection...), I marvel that a show like this ever got made. It took brains, heart and seriously brazen cajones for Creator and Executive Producer Peter Berg and his cohorts (among them Brian Grazer  and David Nevins) to dare to try, and for  network executives to actually air it.  It took faith in a system that really doesn't deserve much faith.  I never read H.G. Bissinger's non-fiction book on which it's based, so I can't speak to how faithful the series is to its source material.  But I do know that in 2002, Sports Illustrated named Friday Night Lights the fourth-greatest book ever written about sports.  However, I can guess that, at the very least, the book was inspirational and gave Berg and his associates a framework with which they could tell stories that went far beyond the football field and which spoke to so many facets of American life.  Let me rephrase that -- so many facets of CONTEMPORARY LIFE. Period.

Part of this show's brilliance is just how "real" it all feels. Like a documentary where you're unaware of the camera. Weirder still -- in an age of reality television (which, given all the contrivances and editing, is really an oxymoron) -- it seems more "real" than these so-called unscripted shows.  Its truths seem so basic, so evident, so humbling in their insightfulness.  After all the other shit that passes for entertainment these days, somehow watching FNL feels redemptive and cleansing. I hesitate to say it, but.. it's fucking ENLIGHTENING.

Without over-sentimentalizing it, FNL reminds us of the things most important in this life.  It resets our perspectives and priorities.  Informs us that getting a decent education is both a fundamental right and yet still an enormous challenge, and not just for people in Africa or the Middle East -- but right here in this country.  That putting food on the table is more important, and more pervasive a problem,  than eating that food at the right table in the right trendy restaurant while wearing the right shoes.  That friendship can be a saving grace.  That integrity is always worth holding on to, and never goes out of style.  That keeping a family together is a brutally difficult task, but well worth the effort.  And that family also comes in many, often surprising, guises. 

The characters on FNL are young, old, black, white, fat, thin, wrinkled and often (because I don't know all the intimate details of some of their undeniably attractive actresses, but I'm just judging by appearances here...) with real breasts, and beyond three-dimensional.  You will fall in love with them. You will cry for them. You will pray for them. You will wish they lived next door to you.  And most of all, you will be humbled by their struggles to forge their own paths and stick to their values -- core so-called American values that many of us have forgotten.  And I don't mean "Christian" values, though most of the shows' characters are in fact church-going. 

So where does football fit into this, you're probably wondering?  It is the communal glue, a uniting force fueled by tradition and a belief that traditions matter.  And that the concept of tradition is often more important than the tradition itself.  It's a metaphor -- you don't have to love sports to understand the idea of a team effort.  Of unique and wildly different individuals working together, fighting together, sometimes failing and recovering together, in the pursuit of a common goal.  So yeah, there's a football team -- which for many of the young characters is the only shot they have of making it out of their fictional town of Dillon, Texas, and of raising themselves up.  But it's also where they learn the value of hard work, of pushing one's self to one's limit, of asking the best of yourself and not letting others down, of living up to your responsibilities and the rewards that come with commitment.

And the people who come to watch these games? They're not rabid fans living vicariously. They're the brothers, sisters, parents, friends, neighbors of these "players"... uniting in support of a group of kids with the odds against them.  Because in watching these kids play, they're watching the best that humanity has to offer.  They're watching hope for the future.  No, they're not curing cancer, but maybe because they learned some lessons about life, and themselves, on the gridiron, they might grow up to be that doctor, lawyer, astronaut, president of the united states, etc....

I must admit that writing about one of the most well-written shows on television is a daunting task.  They make the most of every word..., and every silence.  The writers, directors, producers and actors of FNL understand that the most profound aspects of our existence can often be best illustrated by the simplest of lines, the most seemingly mundane, even trivial, moments. Would it be absurdly over-the-top for me to suggest that the world would be a better place if there were more shows like Friday Night Lights? Well, I don't give a damn, because that's pretty much what I'm saying. Would it be equally absurd for me to say that FNL gives me hope for the future? Not because the characters are real, though they easily could be. But because the writers and everyone else involved in the show believed in these characters and invested them with all their talent and their passion, instead of doing lesser, easier work like so many others in the entertainment industry.  And people watched it.  Not nearly enough of them, but damn it, there were enough of us out there who recognized something extraordinary, though it cloaked itself in the modest trappings of the ordinary.

In order to create a better world, we have to do more than dream it. We have to believe in that dream... and fight for it.  Relentlessly.  Unwaveringly.  And often without a thought to the sobering statistical chances of achieving that dream.  And for five seasons now, the team behind FNL have continued to do just that.  To fight for an artistic vision they felt was important, that had something to say to all of us and about all of us.  And against unfavorable odds. (And if you don't believe the odds against them were enormous... just check out the majority of disposable, cheaply produced crap on television these days...because THAT is what's selling, and sadly, that is what people are watching, thus creating a vicious cycle of shitty supply and ludicrous, tasteless, willing-to-settle-for-less demand).

When the artists give up, we are lost --  as a people, as a nation, as a species.  Peter Berg and his team were as single-minded in their pursuit of a victory as the players on the fictional football teams they depicted. I would end this post with an inspirational quote from Kyle Chandler's character, Coach Eric Taylor, but choosing just one, after nearly five eloquent seasons, seems an impossible challenge. So I'm going to end this post with a challenge of my own: give this show a chance.  Even if you hate football.  Look at it as an act of faith.  If you took the time to read all this, then chances are you're inquisitive, intelligent and/or adventurous enough to pick up the gauntlet, or perhaps you're already a fan of the show, and are simply sharing my sorrow at the passing of something lovely and amazing.  Either way, you've got nothing to lose, except maybe the forty-something minutes you might've wasted instead on Snookie, The Situation, or a housewife who is not only far from real, but denigrates the term for all the underappreciated women who bust their asses to raise children and manage a home.  In other words, it's a win-win. And even if you're not a fan of football, or any sport for that matter, you gotta admit those are some damn favorable odds.

(Amendment: So this morning, my husband got around to reading the post and the one thing that struck him is, perhaps not surprisingly, the same thing that was eating at me after I'd published it. And that is my neglect in giving well-deserved praise to the actors, as well as the producers and casting people who bestowed the opportunity upon these people to use their incredible talents to fully inhabit and bring to life such breathtakingly drawn characters. Yes, I did say breathtaking. And no, I'm not overdoing it. Again, if you watched FNL, you'd know I'm not exaggerating. This cast was beyond outstanding. They made those well-drawn portraits into people who will continue to live in our memories with the same vividness as those we knew and loved in our everyday lives. And now, we will mourn their loss. Admittedly, it will be hard to see them move on to other roles, and sadly, it is unlikely many of them will find roles whose quality even comes close to the work they did on this series. But we wish them every success. They damn well deserve it.)