Showing posts with label Sherman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherman. Show all posts
Monday, January 5, 2015
The Hunger Games -- Mockingjay, Part 1
Photo: Poster used in the viral campaign for the film, from the film's Wikipedia site.
Mockingjay, Part 1 is a very good, effective film that can be seen as a YA action movie, perhaps the first of its breed. Jennifer Lawrence's performance and the just-right balance of action and politics carry it, and save it from being just another action film, or just another angry YA film. I could've done without the (for me) unnecessary romance angle, but I'm not exactly the target audience for this film, and I'm okay with that. In fact, this film deserves the same kudos as the Alien franchise, and maybe Thelma and Louise: usually action films have male main characters and the females are slower-witted things who get told what to do. Mockingjay is exactly the opposite of that: the women here are large and in charge, and it's the men who look and act lost. The men have to be saved by the women, not the other way around.
This is a smarter-than-usual YA movie, which I mean in the kindest of all possible ways. It's political message is strong: if we all fight each other to the death, surely we will all die. This makes sense. Yet, does that mean you shouldn't rebel, as this movie (or, at least, the Capitol, strategically) says for awhile? The answer is No, of course not. The rebels will die if they don't rebel, and they may only die if they do. Furthermore, it makes no sense to support a system that suppresses you. This makes me want to go on a tangent about Southern Republicans, and the women who support the men behind that social and political system, but for now I'll refrain. But don't get me started.
This movie should work for the older crowd, such as myself, as long as said crowd remembers that it is a YA action movie, not necessarily made for guys my age. One immediate criticism (you knew there'd be at least one) hit me, hard, during the movie: Just as the female protagonist (Sigourney Weaver / Ripley) did in the first Alien, Jennifer Lawrence / Katniss (or, more specifically, her sister) does here: during a violent life and death crisis for a large group of people, these two women went back to get the cat. True, Katniss goes back for her sister who had gone to get the cat, whereupon Ripley simply went back for the cat, but it's still the same. Of course, the point is that love conquers all--and I'd be a hypocrite if I said I wouldn't risk life and limb for my own pet--but that doesn't stop me from picturing someone in the underground rebel stronghold murmuring: "Uh, could someone close that door, please? Aren't we getting bombs dropped on us?" It's a bothersome sequence, though, in 1979 and now, if your point is to show that women can be just as formidable in war as men. The scenes fit the YA movie, but it didn't fit the movie's subtext. I'm just sayin'.
And, like me, you may have to assume that the moviemakers really don't believe that an emotionless tyrant in charge of a totalitarian regime--someone so evil that he would bomb a hospital just to prove a point--would let some fighter jets and some really good, sophisticated fighters come and go as they please just to deliver a brainwashed former-boyfriend to a teenage girl who stands mostly as the symbolic representation of a rebellion.
Read that sentence again.
This point was actually discussed between a friend and I recently. I tried picturing Saddam Hussein, for example, doing the same. Or, maybe Stalin. Hell, even Sherman or Ulysses S. Grant. But, no. They'd just overwhelm and kill such fighters, or--like Sherman and Stalin--just burn to hell everything in their paths to starve them out. Chances are, such men wouldn't even know what such emotions were. There's a war to win here, after all. Snow wouldn't think he was fighting one teenage girl. He'd know he was fighting a rebel army, with a solid leader, good fighters, a sophisticated technology expert, etc. If a brainwashed and violent guy would be trained to go after any of those people, Katniss Everdeen would be the last person he'd strangle. He'd be sent after President Coin first, the tech guy second.
That'd be like the U.S. South sending a hitman after Harriet Beecher Stowe, who for many was the symbolic representation of the North's stance against slavery. Didn't happen. (Well, to the best of my knowledge, anyway.) Hell, that'd be like Hirohito sending kamikaze pilots after Rosie the Riveter.
But I digress. I liked the movie. Seriously. It's good for all ages, if you like action movies with a political message. Or if you enjoy looking at Jennifer Lawrence all pissed off. Maybe she was thinking of the guy who hacked into her cloud. (Sorry.) Anyway, go see it, but repeat three times: It's a YA action movie...It's a YA action movie...It's a YA action movie...and a pretty good one, at that.
Labels:
action,
alien,
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Grant,
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Rosie the Riveter,
Sherman,
slavery,
Stalin,
Stowe,
teenage,
U.S.,
YA
Friday, January 3, 2014
Lincoln: Team of Rivals by Doris Kearns Goodwin--Book Review
Photo: Book's paperback cover, via doriskearnsgoodwin.com. There are many editions, but this is the one I read.
Extremely well-written and well-researched book (and, from just a few pages, partially the source of Spielberg's movie, which was also very good) that will make you see and know Lincoln like you never did--or, like you never thought you could. There's so much to digest here that you'd better take your time to do so--but it is well worth the slower pace. I normally read books--even ones this long--in a few days (just over 700 pages, including the epilogue and notes.) Maybe a few weeks, if I'm really busy. This one took several weeks, and I started and finished other things in the meantime.
But, as I said, it was worth it. Reading this spawned a few historical fiction ideas for me. (My book would be narrated from John Hay's POV. Read the book to find out who this guy was.) It gave birth to a memory that I have Carl Sandburg's (until-now authoritative) biography around here somewhere. Reading this book reminded me that I also have a book of Lincoln's own writing around here somewhere. (I have to seriously organize my books.)
By the time you're done with this, you'll feel like you knew Lincoln personally. That you were there in D.C. with him, in those cold rooms, during those cold winters. That you were there to see Mary, his wife, misbehave. That you were there for Chase's political greed, or for some northern generals' incompetence. In essence, you'll simply feel like you were there.
There've been so many books about Lincoln that writers now have to find a different vehicle from which to tell his story. (I suspect the same is true for Jesus and Shakespeare. A recent book about Shakespeare--his biography written in tandem with the exact lines of Shakespeare's famous "Seven Stages of Man"--comes to mind.) This is true here. Goodwin chose to write her Lincoln biography via the men of his cabinet. His team of rivals, if you will--all men who ran against him, or who were in different political parties, or who had differing political agendas, or...you get the idea. And so we get a biography of Lincoln, in Goodwin's voice, told with the information taken from Lincoln's team of rivals. And the wives, girlfriends, and friends of those men. And throw in the information provided by the more important generals, too. The people providing most of the material include John Hay and John Nicolay, his assistants; William Seward, his Secretary of State; Edwin Stanton, his Secretary of War; Salmon Chase, his Secretary of the Treasury; Edward Bates, his Attorney General; and Gideon Welles, his Secretary of the Navy. The generals we see and hear from the most are, of course, Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman; and, to a lesser extent, Generals McClellan, Hooker and Burnside--all three of whom almost managed to lose the war.
But this book isn't just told via diaries, journals, letters, etc. Goodwin's writing style and voice gather all of these together. The result is a mesmerizing, incredibly thorough and very enlightening book that is never boring or condescending. It'll show you why Lincoln is revered, even deified, by many Americans today. If you thought Lincoln's reputation was overblown or perhaps ill-deserved, read this book, and, like me, you'll learn otherwise. And who knew he had such a high-pitched voice, or that he was such a political genius?
Labels:
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Goodwin,
Grant,
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Lincoln,
Mary,
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Sandburg,
Shakespeare,
Sherman,
Spielberg,
team,
team of rivals,
WAR,
Washington
Sunday, June 5, 2011
History, Politics and Casey Anthony
Photo: Confederate President Jefferson Davis, who looks more than a little like Lincoln.
--A recent program on The History Channel, "April, 1865," was fascinating. Really, really well done. The last few weeks of the Civil War, the killing of Lincoln, John Wilkes Booth, and the decisions made by Grant, Lee, Sherman, Johnstone and the Confederate General Johnstone was pitted with, and a few others. These guys could've created American Armageddon if they'd wanted to, especially since the North wanted the South's corpse after Lincoln was shot. I didn't think to gauge the end of the war with the end of other civil wars in my lifetime; but the program's makers were right: the peaceful end was rare in world history. I'll watch it again. Worth DVRing.
--Sarah could do with a little more History Channel viewing, right? Look at her quotes again, and see how they're more about her opinion about bearing arms than they are about anything Revere did, or did not, say.
--Her insistence that she said nothing wrong was more ignorant than the things she actually said wrong. She seems to suffer from George Dubya Disease: Never wrong; very misguided; has a tough time talking and sounding intelligent at the same time. She's a double-barreled shotgun firing on one barrel. Dangerous.
--Real life after a great weekend vacation is such a letdown that I can barely function. Or maybe that's just the residual effect of the recent anesthesia.
--Speaking of which, Dr. Kevorkian just died. Why wasn't that more newsworthy?
--I don't buy a single thing Casey Anthony or her defense has to say. But I do believe that she was molested by somebody when younger--her father, or someone. I'm no psychologist, but she seems to have many of the symptoms: excessive promiscuity, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, lack of responsibility, sociopathic behavior, inability to sustain relationships, borderline personality, narcissism...But, of course, there is no excuse for what she allegedly did.
--Trials are never as exciting for real as they are on tv. Lawyers aren't actors, after all.
--Having said that, I wouldn't want her lawyer. That woman looks and sounds like she doesn't know what she's doing. She objects every few seconds, but then can't articulate why she's objecting. Which makes it look like she's desperate to defend a guilty client, in any way.
--Writing and research are going okay. Back to it...
Labels:
actors,
alcohol abuse,
borderline personality,
Casey Anthony,
Civil War,
drug abuse,
Grant,
John Wilkes Booth,
lawyers,
Lincoln,
narcissism,
Robert E. Lee,
Sherman,
sociopathic,
The History Channel
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