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"If you always do what interests you, at least one person is pleased." (Katherine Hepburn)
Friday, February 7, 2025
Ethnic Cleansing of Gaza - One Woman's Reaction
Thursday, February 6, 2025
She Never Got Into Watching Old Movies
Doom scrolling and reading the major headlines have morphed into one another. Taos Bubbe and I have a small scale political action promise similar to the one JannyLou and I created when Martha McSally was my biggest concern. I'm going back to when the world was aright on its axis.
Linda's comment yesterday (cf title) got me thinking of how I got into watching old movies. I cannot think or write about the coup happening right under our noses (anyone else remember 1933 Germany? They aren't burning the books, they're deleting the websites and all the information stored therein.) so I'm taking myself to a happier place.
Daddooooo's parents watched the Marx Brothers movies with me when I was very young. I didn't understand it all, but Harpo made a lot of sense to me. My recurring desire to pull a giant horn out of my pocket and blast away at stupidity comes straight from Sunday afternoons and Million Dollar Movie.
G'ma and I laughed uproariously at Buster Keaton's The General when I was in high school. If Errol Flynn knocks on the door,
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I went off to Cornell, where there were seven movie outlets on campus. Classic films, cult films, X-rated films; remember I Am Curious (Yellow)? There were first run movie theatres downtown and at The Crossroads (which really was at the crossroads of many diverse paths), but those required a car and a modicum of advance planning. And they were expensive. Ours demanded not much more than our attendance.
Then I took myself to Chicago and TBG came to visit and we walked into The Biograph Theatre
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where the audience was convulsed in laughter. It was the second half of Bringing Up Baby (neither of us can remember which main feature we were there to see) and although we had no information at all it took about 10 seconds before we, too, were howling as Cary Grant yelled Susan!!! at Katherine Hepburn.
| The blonde at the film |
We usually walked, my graduate school friends and I, through the (then) largely ungentrified DePaul neighborhood. When it was super cold we'd pile into Big Steve's car, park in the lot that only locals knew about, walk through the alley where John Dillinger was shot, and pay $2.50 for the late shows. \They started at 9pm, which was just about when we'd finished school and work and dinner and, if it were a weekend, a game or two of Clue.
There was The Granada, a big, beautiful, ornate and overdone masterpiece of a real movie theatre,
| Chicago Magazine |
DVD's and Netflix helped when we moved to Marin. TCM has saved us in Arizona. I try to go to The Fox Theatre and sit in those two person upholstered couches in the loge
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And isn't that what a good movie experience is supposed to do?
*****
For Linda and anyone else who wants to start at the beginning, arranged roughly:
Casablanca
Charade
Singing in the Rain/anything with Jeannette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy
Bringing Up Baby
Robin Hood/The Sea Hawk/Captain Blood (and TBG would be furious if I left off The Mark of Zorro)
The Lady Eve
North by Northwest/Psycho (if your heart can stand terror... serious screaming out loud terror)
If you're not hooked by then, tell me what you want.....
Wednesday, February 5, 2025
Credit Where Credit Is Due
| nbc news |
Yesterday, he was, once again, where he needed to be. His first government job was with USAID. His reaction to the illegal shut down and reorganization under the State Department was obvious - he walked over to talk to someone, to see what was happening.
Tuesday, February 4, 2025
I didn't plan to write about movies. I thought I'd be describing the eerie overlaps between the book I just finished and the series the Cali kids and I binged after getting everyone else in the house settled in.
Instead, every time I sat down on the couch, laptop on my lap, TCM tempted me away. It's Oscars Month, and the line up is irresistible.
We saw snippets of some (The Great Dictator..... I've never been able to get through a whole Charlie Chaplin film) and avoided others (All About Eve was too bitchy, 1937's A Star is Born was too melancholy, 12 Angry Men was too preachy).
Some we've never seen (In the Heat of the Night) and are in the queue where TBG can find them and where I could, too, if ever took the time to learn.
And some start out as pretty music as we clean up after dinner and by the time we're comfy on the couch it's obvious to both of us that we are in for the whole film.
I've lost typing time to Singing in the Rain, and Brigadoon, and, tonight, the movie we watch and listen to from the opening credits through to the final copyright seal - The Sting. Newman and Redford and Scott Joplin reimagined by Marvin Hamlisch keep us glued to the screen.
There's always something new to discover, a nuanced look, a so that's whose glove it is moment. When the Oscar qualifying nomination is for cinematography or art direction or musical score, I look at a familiar film in an entirely new way.
As our leaders begin to make some righteous noise (Sen. Andy Kim's press conference outside the shuttered ASAID office), as I begin to develop a phone friendship with Brendan at Rep. Ciscomani's office, as the occasional judge says WTF????, I'm delighted to be enchanted with songs and dances and memories (The Sting is driving through Wisconsin in our MGB; Music Man is watching on the couch in Cleveland with TBG's dad; The Way We Were is me sobbing on the phone to TBG, a thousand miles away, my own Golden Boy).
I don't mind adding a pleasant soundtrack to what seems like a teeny tiny awakening.
It's a much better mindset than reading my BlueSky feed and going down the rabbit hole. I'm going to imagine a scenario with a hopeful outcome. And that scenario will be set to great music.
Monday, February 3, 2025
Rest In Peace, Thomas the Wonder Dog
He lived 15 years with his adoptive family, loving SIR and Little Cuter first, then adding FlapJilly and Giblet as they came along. He accepted TBG as his Grandpa, trotting over to him, leash in mouth and tail wagging, as we put down our suitcases in the hall. My husband didn't need a dog of his own; he had his Grand Dog.
He was the fastest, smartest, strongest fellow, routinely being asked to retrieve balls for owners whose own pets were unable to swim that far.
He was the most patient and kind and loving pooch. His periscope tail left him exposed to FlapJilly's Baby Proctologist forefinger. We stopped it just barely in time, but he didn't flinch. The kids perched headphones precariously over his ears and he shrugged and went along with it.
He was alert to every intruder in the area, barking sonorously at bicycles and other dogs and random trucks and cars. They didn't need an alarm; they had Thomas.
His snuggles are legendary.
His eyes burned a loving memory in our hearts.
He was finished with this world, which was so lucky to have him for such a lovely long time.
Rest In Peace.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Maybe Tomorrow
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Starting The Day Off Right
Monday, January 27, 2025
Better Late Than Never
Friday, January 24, 2025
Don't Tell Me To Ignore What I Saw
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
Stupidity
Having trouble dealing with those you love who've somehow gone over to the dark side?
I know that I am. It breaks my heart. I feel helpless and flummoxed and at a loss for words.... which, for me, is really saying something.
As if she felt my angst over the miles, Susie Q sent this today.
Clear, thoughtful, and beautifully illustrated, it's worth a listen over lunch.


