Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Soup's On!: Duck Soup

Before we get rolling onto the next installment of my AFI journey, let's start things off with some honesty: 1) This is NOT being posted one week after the last Butch Cassidy post 2) At this rate I am never going to make my resolution by the end of the year aka all dreams are lies. So I'm going to be way better about this if that is cool with you. Bon apetit!

Duck Soup (1933)

Director: Leo McCarey
Writers: Bert Kalmar, Harry Ruby, Arthur Sheekman, Nat Perrin
Main Actors: The Four Marx Brothers (Groucho, Harpo, Chico & Zeppo)
Synopsis: Rufus T. Firefly is named president of bankrupt Freedonia and declares war on neighboring Sylvania to win the love (and money) of Mrs. Teasdale.
AFI #60

Kneejerk Reaction: I giggled and guffawed the whole way through. I realized I probably saw this movie as a kid since my parents were huge Marx Brothers fans, only this time I was able to catch the satire. Although I'm certain my dad explained it all to two-year old me at the time which explains a lot about who I am. Anyways, the movie was clever, it was fun and nobody rattles off a fast, deadpan one-liner like Groucho.


High Points: The movie switches between Groucho & Zeppo, the president and his straight man secretary, and Chico & Harpo, the spies. It's a perfect balance between the steady stream of jokes and slapstick, with the running gags getting funnier every time. Whenever Chico and Harpo meet a new character, like the ambassador or the merchant, I die. When Groucho is looking in the "mirror"? Holy crap. This is comedy gold, people! Gold! 


Why I Think It's On the Top 100: The Marx Brothers had a huge impact on comedy and this film in particular is so smart in its criticism of government and people that it is not your run-of-the-mill comedy filled with cheap laughs. Well, there are cheap laughs, but they move from joke to joke so seamlessly that the movie is a masterpiece even without the social commentary.


Geek-Out Scale: I'd say you could be at about a 5 on the Geek-Out Scale (1 = From Justin to Kelly is your favorite movie and 10 = you watched Intolerance everyday for a week and then gave a Power Point to your nearest and dearest. For fun.) If you love comedy this is a great place to see where a lot of your contemporary favorites got inspired but you will also be in for a treat if you love The Three Stooges, Laurel & Hardy or Abbott and Costello. If you haven't seen any of them, then there really is no hope for you, is there? 


When Will I See You Again?: I have been putting this movie on every time I sit down to write this post and just had to pause it because I kept getting distracted and wanting to watch it instead of write. So..... soon? Also, I just realized I fit my description of a 10 on the Geek-Out Scale (although Duck Soup is MUCH easier to swallow than Intolerance, am I right?! "No one else cares about Intolerance," you say? "Sit down, geek," you say? But wait, you WILL care about Intolerance if you keep reading my AFI posts muhahaha!!)



All right, lassies and lads. Hope you enjoyed this snack about Duck Soup. Let me know if you watch it and what you think, what you want me to watch next, etc. Please feel free to keep track of my progress on the Top 100 here. And make sure to throw virtual tomatoes if I make you wait too long for the next one. I am going to be in Mexico next week so expect the next post the second week of October!




soupy sales & flowers & sunshine,

bunny 


Thursday, August 2, 2012

Rootin' Tootin': Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

One of my New Year's resolutions I have botched time and time again is viewing every movie on the AFI Top 100. Just in case you're as big of a nerd as I am about this kind of stuff, let me clarify it is the original list, not the laughs or thrills, etc. Oh yeah, those exist, too. But I digress.

This year I have finally been making some real, dedicated headway on the AFI resolution and I figure someone out there might be interested to know my thoughts on the classics as I view them for the first time. I am a film fanatic, but I can simultaneously view a movie analytically and for the sheer joy of it. I can see what qualifies it as a classic while honestly admitting if it's one I will watch more than once. I'll even make sure to tell you just how geeked out you'll need to be to enjoy it. Along the way, feel free to give me questions to consider or suggest which movie I should watch next. But without further ado...


Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969)
Director: George Roy Hill
Writer: William Goldman
Main Actors: Paul Newman, Robert Redford, Katharine Ross
Synopsis: Two Western bank and train robbers head for Bolivia when the law gets too close.
AFI #73

Kneejerk Reaction: From beginning to end, I was entertained. I had seen the ending a million times in school and I still never tire of it. The script is impeccable; I dream of writing as well as William Goldman with his mix of understated wit and heartbreaking honesty about the human condition. Hill is a master when it comes to directing and this is one of his crown jewels. Beautiful scenery and shots.

High Points: This is a tough one, but I love the opening, with the silent short film about the infamous Hole-in-the-Wall Gang, when Butch and Etta play around on the bicycle, when Butch and Sundance are chased through the desert, Butch, Sundance & Etta's old timey photos of their adventures, the montage of them robbing in Bolivia and, of course, the end. Can we all agree I am terrible at picking high points? I basically loved the whole movie. Sheesh.

Why I Think It's On the Top 100: Hill and Goldman take a classic genre and add some humor and life while making social commentary that goes beyond 1969: aging, feeling disconnected from a changing world and unable to keep up anymore/not wanting to, the evolution of technology, film, storytelling and history, the complicated nature of human relationships, the microscopic line between "good" and "bad" and probably many more I haven't thought of yet. If you have seen this movie, is there anything you think I am missing?

Geek-Out Scale: I would say you need to be at about a 6 (10 being you could watch silent films for a day and be entertained). It isn't as long as some classics and as I said, the music, cast, writing and scenery are lovely. If you are a little wary, trust me and be open to it because I promise it is not the dry and boring classic that you might be imagining. It was made in 1969 which was an incredibly exciting time for filmmaking. The Production Code had just been lifted in 1968, so subject matters like sex and violence were no longer implied. Filmmakers could openly discuss and show these things and got really experimental with it. This one is not super gory or sexy, but they are not hiding anything like old school Westerns did. So if you are on the fence about classics, the 60s and 70s are a good place to start!

When Will I See You Again?: I'm ready to see this one again so I can fully absorb what I saw the first time. In fact, I might just buy this movie.


There you go. That's all I really needed to get off my brain. Hopefully that wasn't too painful. I promise I am not writing up my thoughts to be a pretentious asshole. If anything, these posts are more for me than anyone else. I love everything about movies and this is just a way for me to expel all the emotions and excitement I experience after I see a really good movie (even a so-so movie!). And who knows, maybe I can inspire some doubters out there to take a look at not only the classics, but every movie they watch. So please! Let me know what you think, if you've seen it, where I am wrong, where I am amazing and perfect. I love discussing and want this to be a place for that.

Stay tuned - the next breakdown will be posted soon! Wondering what movies I have seen so far? Click here and check my progress!





flowers & sunshine & those Saturday Night at the Movies feelings,
bunny




Sunday, July 29, 2012

AFI TOP 100 - bunny checklist

I have challenged myself to watch all of the movies on the AFI Top 100. You have successfully reached the post where I will keep track of my progress. If you think I should update this frequently, turn to page 130. If you think I should drunkenly swim in my pool and anger my cop neighbor, turn to page 10. Update frequently? Then click on the link at the end of each screening post so you can come back and help me decide what to watch next. Also, please don't judge me - I know there are movies on here that the most basic movie lover has watched a million times and I have yet to see. Keep in mind, some I saw so long ago that I don't remember them or I have only seen parts, etc. Yes. Lay off. This is SUPPOSED to be fun. Don't ruin it for the rest of us. Jerk.

Color Guide:
WATCHED
NOT WATCHED


AFI Top 100
1CITIZEN KANE1941
2THE GODFATHER1972
3CASABLANCA1942
4RAGING BULL1980
5SINGIN' IN THE RAIN1952
6GONE WITH THE WIND1939
7LAWRENCE OF ARABIA1962
8SCHINDLER'S LIST1993
9VERTIGO1958
10THE WIZARD OF OZ1939
11CITY LIGHTS1931
12THE SEARCHERS1956
13STAR WARS1977
14PSYCHO1960
152001: A SPACE ODYSSEY1968
16SUNSET BLVD.1950
17THE GRADUATE1967
18THE GENERAL1927
19ON THE WATERFRONT1954
20IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE1946
21CHINATOWN1974
22SOME LIKE IT HOT1959
23THE GRAPES OF WRATH1940
24E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL1982
25TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD1962
26MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON1939
27HIGH NOON1952
28ALL ABOUT EVE1950
29DOUBLE INDEMNITY1944
30APOCALYPSE NOW1979
31THE MALTESE FALCON1941
32THE GODFATHER PART II1974
33ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST1975
34SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS1937
35ANNIE HALL1977
36THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI1957
37THE BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES1946
38THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE1948
39DR. STRANGELOVE1964
40THE SOUND OF MUSIC1965
41KING KONG1933
42BONNIE AND CLYDE1967
43MIDNIGHT COWBOY1969
44THE PHILADELPHIA STORY1940
45SHANE1953
46IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT1934
47A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE1951
48REAR WINDOW1954
49INTOLERANCE1916
50THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING2001
51WEST SIDE STORY1961
52TAXI DRIVER1976
53THE DEER HUNTER1978
54M*A*S*H1970
55NORTH BY NORTHWEST1959
56JAWS1975
57ROCKY1976
58THE GOLD RUSH1925
59NASHVILLE1975
60DUCK SOUP1933
61SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS1941
62AMERICAN GRAFFITI1973
63CABARET1972
64NETWORK1976
65THE AFRICAN QUEEN1951
66RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK1981
67WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?1966
68UNFORGIVEN1992
69TOOTSIE1982
70A CLOCKWORK ORANGE1971
71SAVING PRIVATE RYAN1998
72THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION1994
73BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID1969
74THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS1991
75IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT1967
76FORREST GUMP1994
77ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN1976
78MODERN TIMES1936
79THE WILD BUNCH1969
80THE APARTMENT1960
81SPARTACUS1960
82SUNRISE1927
83TITANIC1997
84EASY RIDER1969
85A NIGHT AT THE OPERA1935
86PLATOON1986
8712 ANGRY MEN1957
88BRINGING UP BABY1938
89THE SIXTH SENSE1999
90SWING TIME1936
91SOPHIE'S CHOICE1982
92GOODFELLAS1990
93THE FRENCH CONNECTION1971
94PULP FICTION1994
95THE LAST PICTURE SHOW1971
96DO THE RIGHT THING1989
97BLADE RUNNER1982
98YANKEE DOODLE DANDY1942
99TOY STORY1995
100BEN-HUR1959

There are more lists broken down into genres and best of each genre, but I have only challenged myself to see all the ones listed on the AFI Top 100: 10th Anniversary list. Once I am done with the list, maybe I'll go back and watch the ones I had already watched before I challenged myself to see the rest, but let's cross that bridge (On the River Kwai?!) when we come to it. Enjoy!



flowers & sunshine, 
bunny

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Come Mister Tally Man, Tally Me Banana

It's been awhile since I last took a crack at my blog. Initially I wasn't working on it because I took the challenge to write everyday this year (which sounds counter intuitive, I know) and I was distracting myself with this blog from the writing I really love, all my various ideas and half-started screenplays & plays. For some reason, even though I am the most exhilarated when I am letting my stories take off, I am always procrastinating, putting them off to write another day. I think it is fear, more than anything, the fear that I won't be as good as I hope to be. But I am gradually overcoming it. Because who has ever heard of a screenwriter that didn't write scripts? And that is what I eventually want to be. At this point. So there is that. But I got the urge to come back here and reach out to anyone who's still listening. And I believe the best place to start back up is with the Proust Questionnaire.

And that's what you call debon-hair. With your questionnaire.
I first heard about this questionnaire through Mary-Kate & Ashley Olsen's book, Influence, which is amazing and I will not apologize for loving it or them to the cynics out there. While we are on the subject, I will also admit that I argued with one of my best friends about who was the better Olsen twin while we overlooked the Forum in Rome. God Bless Americans. Anyways, since my paraphrase would come out almost identical, I will give you their short & sweet explanation of the questionnaire:

"In the late 19th century, the French writer, Marcel Proust, stumbled upon a questionnaire called 'An Album to Record Thoughts, Feelings, etc.' Proust answered the survey several times in his life and helped popularize the revelatory questions, which became known as the Proust Questionnaire, as a way to uncover a subject's true characteristics and emotions ever since." Here goes nothin'.......

Your most marked characteristic?
My smile and/or my ability to talk to anyone.

The quality you most like in a man?
Sense of humor. A real one too. He has to be clever enough to make me laugh obnoxiously loud the first time and every time I think of something he has said, but also have the ability to laugh when shit hits the fan.

The quality you most like in a woman?
Confident individuality. She is one-of-a-kind and doesn't apologize for it.

What do you most value in your friends?
They stick by me even when I act like a real asshole and we can have a good time no matter what we are doing or where we are.

What is your principle defect?
I am way too impatient. With EVERYTHING.

What is your favorite occupation?
To this day, my job at my town's video store is still the best job I ever had. Movies are my heaven. But I couldn't do it now, not enough to do. I loved the theatre community, too. I just like having a pleasant time and keeping busy at a subject matter I am passionate about!

What is your dream of happiness?
Moving on from my past, overcoming fears and creating on a life of experience, purpose and love that I can be proud of and pass along. I'm making some headway :)

What to your mind would be the greatest of misfortunes?
Dying before I get a chance to prove myself and feel like I have made my mark.

What would you like to be?
I'm stealing Ashley Olsen's answer which she stole from Lauren Hutton: "a wise woman."

In what country would you like to live?
Italy, if the government wasn't awful, or France. Or the US but in the Virgin Islands or Hawaii or California or something. 

What is your favorite color?
I have favorite shades of all of them.

What is your favorite flower?
Lotus flower.

What is your favorite bird?
Chickadees.

Who are your favorite prose writers?
William Goldman, Nabokov, David Sedaris, F. Scott, Tina Fey, John Hughes, Cameron Crowe, Woody Allen.

Who are your favorite poets?
James Ragan, E.A. Mares, T.S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, Virginia Woolf.

Who are your favorite heroes of fiction?
Ferris Bueller, Captain Ron, Kermit the Frog.

Who are your favorite heroines of fiction?
Auntie Mame, Kate Bjorkman, Penny Lane, J.B. Fletcher.

Who are your favorite composers?
The Beatles, Jenny Lewis, the Talking Heads, the Allman Brothers.

Who are your favorite painters?
Bonnard, Dufy, Van Gogh, Renoir.

Who are your heroes in real life?
My mom, my husband, Goldie Hawn, Jim Henson, Tina Fey.

What is it you most dislike?
Ignorance.

What natural gift would you most like to possess?
Focus.

How would you like to die?
At peace.

What is your present state of mind?
Antsy.

To what faults do you feel most indulgent?
Procrastination.

What is your motto?
Stay alive as long as you live.

Your name or pseudo
Josephine, Jojo, Jo, Josie, Jojo Bunny, Bunny Girl, Hunka Monka, Babaloo, (College Nicknames) --------> Hoe, Hoe Hoe, Jose, Jose Cuervo, Jose Ballsack, Ballsack, Bozek, Phiner, Pheeny, Josephine Evelyn Jude Bozek Jr. III, Wifey  



work all night on a drink of rum,
bunny