It says something of an actor who can capture the angst of
Spike Lee, the vernacular of David Mamet, the humility of Lasse Hallström and
the badassery of, well, anyone. But that’s Delroy Lindo. Made famous by
delivering three stellar performances in Spike Lee films, Lindo has subtly been
adding weight to “bigger” names for the better part of 20 years. Possessed with
an undeniable charm, the ability to flex sudden terror, and a smile that can play
as so many things, Lindo is one of the finest actors to have been involved in
Spike Lee’s troupe. And any other troupe, for that matter.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Spike Lee in Person, Part 2: the Q&A
Spike Lee answers questions from students at VCU (photo from vcu.edu) |
Welcome to Part 2 of Spike Lee’s recent visit to Virginia
Commonwealth University. Yesterday, I chronicled the first part of Lee’s two
and half hour discussion, in which he lectured the mostly young, black crowd
about the importance of motivation, and the necessity of making education
“cool” again. Lee’s words were inspiring, informative, and controversial,
sometimes all at once. Thankfully, the Q&A portion of the evening allowed
Lee to continue speaking his mind.
Plenty of questions were asked during the discussion, so
I’ve split them into four distinct topics to help add separation to Lee’s
thoughts.
For reference, feel free to check out my write-up about
Spike Lee’s lecture at VCU. Enjoy!
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Spike Lee in Person, Part I: The Lecture
Spike Lee at VCU (photo from vcu.edu) |
The event was sold out, but at the literal
last minute, a very kind professor took pity on me and gave me an extra ticket
he had. Genuinely, it was one of the kindest, most random acts I’ve ever been
privy too.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Oscar Week: My (Hopefully Not So) Dark Horse Oscar Picks
There’s a funny thing about Oscar Sunday: with every passing
year, I seem to grow less and less interested in the crop of films that are
nominated for Academy Awards. Don’t get me wrong, there are always some solid
entries, but when compared to my personal favorite films of any given year, the
Oscars simply don’t reflect my tastes. So here’s the funny thing. Despite my
indifference toward the Oscar hopeful films, I’m still overly ecstatic for the
big show. Why? Few reasons.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Oscar Week: Reasons to Watch the Independent Spirit Awards
I love the hell out of the Independent Spirit Awards. They
always take place under a large tent nestled on the California coast, the
day directly before the Oscars. And considering attendees are encouraged
to dress casually, drink heavily, and basically have a genuine good time, the Spirits are, in
many respects, the antithesis of the Academy Awards. Here are a handful of
reasons you shouldn’t forget to watch tonight’s broadcast (if it’s available
to you), tonight on the Independent Film Channel at 10 p.m. EST.
Friday, February 22, 2013
Oscar Week: Top 20 Oscar Speeches
Want to know why I love the Oscars? Well, there are a few
reasons, but certainly the most valuable is watching someone achieve their
dreams right before your very eyes. Occasionally, someone involved in the film
business wins an Oscar and instead of incoherently listing names or reading a
speech they’ve written out of annoying presumption, they dig deep and a take
few minutes to unveil who they really are.
There’s something I find very moving in that experience. I hope you enjoy my
picks and forgive the absence of names like Field, Hanks, Palance, Moore and
Gooding, Jr. Their speeches gained notoriety, but the ones below drew on
sensitivity.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Oscar Week: Top 10 Best Actor Winners
If I learned one thing from my Top 10 Best Actress picks
yesterday, it’s that I sincerely appreciate an actress’s ability to play a
woman in peril. Similarly, the majority of my favorite Best Actor-winning
performances are male characters at their most hopeless. Whether they’re
battling revenge, insanity, alcoholism, or AIDS, most of the men below fought
to remove themselves from situations they could not control. Some lived, some
died, but they all won.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Oscar Week: Top 10 Best Actress Winners
It really says something of my personal movie tastes that every
single performance below was played an actress conveying a female at their most
desperate. Or, at the very least, at their most unwilling. As in, unwilling to
bow down and take it. Whether they were fighting the law, themselves, or
would-be sexual abusers, the performances below represent my favorite Best
Actress Oscar wins. Tomorrow, I’ll rank the fellas.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Oscar Week: Best Director - If I Chose the Winners
The rules for this post are the same as when I picked my
personal winners of every Best Picture prize. While I’ve seen all of the
respective films that caused filmmakers to win the Best Director Oscar, I
certainly haven’t seen all of the nominees. So we’ll start my winners at 1939
and carry on down.
The Academy’s winners are in bold, while my picks are highlighted. And, just for trivia’s sake, I matched the Academy’s
choice for Best Director 29 out of the 72 years I’m considering. A little better
than my 23/72 Best Pictures. Enjoy!
Oscar Week: Ranking the Best Picture Winners
This post was originally going to list my Top 10 Best
Picture Winners of all time, with reasons as to why… but I pretty much did the reasoning yesterday. So here are a few
lists that better breakdown where my head’s at in terms of every film that has
won Oscar’s top prize. Enjoy!
Monday, February 18, 2013
Oscar Week: Reviews of Every Best Picture Winner
A few years ago, in an amusing little twist of fate, I sat
down and watched the final Best Picture winner that I hadn’t seen, which was
the first film to ever win the top prize. And in my time of making my way
through all of these films, I was privy to many exciting revelations, and a few
dozen hours of intense monotony as well. Some of the films below are surprising
accomplishments, others do next to nothing for me, while a handful simply speak
for themselves. I hope you enjoy my thoughts on all the Best Picture winners,
and feel free to share yours in the comments!
Friday, February 15, 2013
Top 10 Agenda Films That Provoke Discussion
When I say “agenda film,” I’m talking about movies that pose
an obvious moral dilemma, or examine social issues that often divide people. The
possibilities here are endless, but below are a handful of films that have triggered
memorable discussions with my friends and family after the fact.
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Motifs of Cinema: Love
At one point in Billy Wilder’s masterpiece, The Lost Weekend, helpless alcoholic and
sometime writer Don Birnam says, “Love is the hardest thing in the world to
write about. It’s so simple. You’ve got to catch it through details.”
That couldn’t be more accurate, and it is exactly what
Andrew from Encore’s World of Film and TV has tasked a handful of bloggers to
do. Or, more specifically, what I tasked myself
to do, after Andrew asked me to choose from a list of themes he thought
best-encapsulated 2012.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
In Character: Margo Martindale
Margo Martindale’s Texas birthright is as much to thank
for her career as anything else. This truly phenomenal actress has been
featured in countless films and television shows, won a Primetime Emmy, stolen
my heart, and beaten me down, all thanks to two things: southern charm mixed
with country angst.
When Martindale plays kind, she can give a look that will
bring tears to your eyes. But when she plays mean, she plays mean. I love her honesty, am drawn to
her sensitivity, and am continually wowed by her malice. Simply put: Margo
Martindale is one of the finest character actors we have working today.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
The SONSOFBITCHES Snubathon: A Decade of Oscar Snubs
Mette of Lime Reviews and Strawberry Confessions (what a
perfect blog name, by the way) is heading up a blogathon in which she’s asked fellow bloggers to discuss their biggest personal movie awards snubs. Seeing as
I’m a huge fan of calling The Academy on their faults, I jumped at the
opportunity to partake.
Initially, I was tempted to write about one egregious snub
in particular, but I’ve leant enough space to that exclusion on this blog
already. Instead, motivated by Mette’s instructions to follow “no guidelines or
restrictions” for this post, I’ve drafted a list of the 10 biggest Oscar snubs
over the past decade. One snub per year, no matter the category.
I hope you enjoy my picks, and props to Mette for starting
such a cool blogathon!
Monday, February 11, 2013
Side Effects
If there’s one thing to say about Steven Soderbergh, it’s
that the man never had any interest in making the same film twice. Sure, he
made two sequels to Ocean’s Eleven
(which are wildly different from one another, to better or worse degrees, I’ll
let you decide), split his epic, Che,
into two parts, and conveyed his stories in similar fashions, but for all
intents and purposes, I’ve never seen Soderbergh repeat himself.
If anything, it is his perfect style and flawless craft that
links his films together. You can always tell, within minutes, that you’re
watching a Soderbergh film, but, again, I’d argue they all differ in story and
plot.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Oscar Reviews: Best Short Film (Live Action)
I’ve learned a few things from watching all of the 2013
Oscar nominated shorts. Most importantly, there are some damn fine short movies
competing for Academy Awards this year. (Which makes me wonder how many hundreds
of excellent shorts I’ve missed in the past. But oh well.) Unfortunately, the
flip side to great is bad, and there are a few of those nominated too.
I hope you enjoy the Live Action reviews, and feel free to
catch up on my Documentary and Animated Shorts breakdowns as well!
Oscar Reviews: Best Short Film (Animated)
For the first time in my life, I have officially seen every
movie currently nominated for an Academy Award before the actual ceremony.
Which is kind of insane, or pathetic, or awesome. I’m not sure. It certainly wasn’t
intentional; I just realized one day that if I watched that foreign film and those documentaries
and all those shorts, then I’d be
set.
I’m lucky enough to live close to a theater currently
showing all of the 2013 Oscar nominated short films, and here are my thoughts
on the animated films vying for the Academy’s attention this year.
Thursday, February 7, 2013
My 2013 Oscar Nominations
I love cooking up this list every year. The game is simple:
if I was the sole member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,
here’s who I would nominate in each of the major Oscar categories. Winners are
in bold, and although it’s a bit of a Rust and Bone lovefest, if gives you a
good idea of who’d I’d love to see win come Oscar night. Enjoy!
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Oscar Reviews: Best Documentary Short
Over the next few days, I’m going to shed light on Oscar categories that rarely get discussed. If for no other reason than I think
it will be fun to give props to a handful of well regarded films that likely
won’t get much play from the public.
Today I’m giving mini reviews for the five movies nominated
for the Best Documentary Short Oscar. This was my first time watching all of
the nominees in this category before
the actual show, and damn, this was some heavy shit. I was genuinely and pleasantly
surprised by the quality of these docs. So, alphabetically, the nominees are…
Monday, February 4, 2013
House of Cards (and how it will change television)
I was one of the maniacs who crushed out the entire first
season this weekend. The result of which produced some damn fine television,
sure, but also a handful of exciting discussions about my general apathy for
television. But more on that later.
Friday, February 1, 2013
Top 10 Performances by People Known for Another Profession
It takes a rather unique set of skills to enter into an
arena as big as acting and prove that you have something to offer. Acting is
difficult enough, but attempting to act when you’re already well known for
other reasons, is, more often than not, a lose/lose situation. The 10 performances
listed below are rare exceptions. Some of the actors were well known for bucking
the system through rap, others were prominent athletes who never really took to
the screen again – but no matter, the performances below stepped into the arena
and utterly killed it.
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