Holiday connection: Home and life swapping during the holiday season
Showing posts with label Kate Winslet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Winslet. Show all posts
Saturday, December 08, 2018
favorite movie #103 - holiday edition: the holiday
Favorite movies that have had an impact on me - #103 - The Holiday (2006) - Iris (Kate Winslet) and Amanda (Cameron Diaz) are severely unlucky at love. To escape their most recent heartbreaks they switch houses on a home-exchange website for the holidays — Iris moving into Amanda's palatial L.A. mansion, where she meets musician Miles (Jack Black), and Amanda into Iris's charming, but very quiet Surrey cottage. Quiet, that is, until Iris's brother Graham (Jude Law) stops by looking for his sister. The Holiday on its surface is a fairly standard rom-com. You'd have to have never seen one before to not guess the outcome. What sets it apart from the pack is the charm of its four leads and the twin holiday backdrops of wintry Surrey and sunny Hollywood. There is also some great supporting work from Eli Wallach, who plays a Classic Old Hollywood screenwriter who teaches Winslet about meet-cutes and how to be a gal with gumption.
Labels:
2000s,
Cameron Diaz,
Christmas,
eli wallach,
Kate Winslet,
movies,
the holiday
Tuesday, December 06, 2011
fun non-holiday movies that happen to take place around christmas
There are countless holiday films featuring Santa and elves and "bah humbug"-ers, but you don't have to watch a holiday movie to still get a holiday vibe. There are some great movies out there that could still be enjoyed this time of year, in which Christmas plays a supporting role. Here are my suggestions for an alternative holiday movie marathon of non-holiday movies that take place around Christmas:
Die Hard — Bruce Willis stars as John McClane, a New York cop trying to reunite with his wife who has taken a job in L.A. during the holidays. Instead he finds the fancy new firm where she works is under siege by terrorists and he may be the only one who can save her and himself. It's the first and the best of the 80s action movies. Undeniably violent, but full of wry humor. And as an extra Christmas gift, Alan Rickman (in his feature film debut!) plays arch villain Hans "Bubbe."
The Lion in Winter — Fun couple Eleanor of Aquitaine and Henry Plantagenet of England are getting together for the holidays ... and Katherine Hepburn and Peter O'Toole bring every bit of venom and humor they can to this wonderful film (based on the play) about their power struggles over the successor to Henry's throne. It's not exactly historically accurate, but it is good drama.
Brazil — Terry Gilliam's masterpiece, Brazil is set during the Christmas holidays, but its 1984-like world is grayed-out and devoid of cheer. Jonathan Pryce is wonderful as Sam the dreamer/hero and Robert DeNiro almost steals the show in his amusing cameo as a genial terrorist named Tuttle.
About A Boy — Hugh Grant's Will lives off the substantial royalties from his father's one-hit wonder and Christmas hit, Santa's Super Sleigh. Perpetually immature, he meets Marcus, a young boy with a single, troubled mom, and the two form a very unlikely friendship. Based on the book by Nick Hornby, it's a sad and funny and truly wonderful film. It's also Grant's best performance to-date.
Desk Set — My favorite Tracy/Hepburn movie, Desk Set takes place during the Christmas season. Hepburn heads the reference department for a major New York television network, answering questions like the names of all of Santa's reindeer. Tracy has invented a computer that Hepburn and her crew fear will make them obsolete. Their chemistry is adorable, and it's a brightly colored, witty romantic comedy. It's also a fun slice of nostalgia, as the enormous room-sized computer is installed in Hepburn's 1957 office space. So much of the technology has changed in 50 years, but the office politics are still the same.
While You Were Sleeping — Another romantic comedy set during Christmas. Sandra Bullock as Lucy and Bill Pullman as Jack are wonderful together, and Peter Gallagher looks great — although he spends the majority of the film in a coma. A fun, quirky film, full of characters that you wish that you knew in real life.
Also fun viewing:
Meet Me In St. Louis — a turn-of-the century musical with Judy Garland at her most gorgeous, singing the very best rendition of "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas."
The Family Stone — the ultimate nightmare holiday with the relatives, except it's fun to watch because they aren't my relatives. Diane Keaton heads a dream cast that includes Craig T. Nelson, Rachel McAdams, Claire Danes, Dermot Mulroney, Luke Wilson, and Sarah Jessica Parker.
The Holiday — Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet switch houses for the holidays. I found myself wanting to just spend Christmas with Winslet and Jack Black. Still, it's fluffy and fun and Eli Wallach has a great part, too, as an Old Hollywood script writer who takes a shine to Winslet.
Mixed Nuts — Definitely a mixed bag, Mixed Nuts is a comedy about a suicide-prevention hotline, set during the holiday season, and all of the crazy characters on both sides of the telephone. Steve Martin, Madeline Khan, Adam Sandler, Liev Schrieber, and Rita Wilson are all at their zaniest.
Die Hard — Bruce Willis stars as John McClane, a New York cop trying to reunite with his wife who has taken a job in L.A. during the holidays. Instead he finds the fancy new firm where she works is under siege by terrorists and he may be the only one who can save her and himself. It's the first and the best of the 80s action movies. Undeniably violent, but full of wry humor. And as an extra Christmas gift, Alan Rickman (in his feature film debut!) plays arch villain Hans "Bubbe."
Love Actually — the mother of all ensemble movies, Love Actually is kind of a mess and kind of adorable, depending on which storyline you're currently watching. But it has some genuinely funny moments, such as Bill Nighy's cynical holiday ditty, "Christmas is All Around." And how can you argue with a cast that includes Emma Thompson, Alan Rickman, Hugh Grant, and Colin Firth?
Meet Me In St. Louis — a turn-of-the century musical with Judy Garland at her most gorgeous, singing the very best rendition of "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas."
The Family Stone — the ultimate nightmare holiday with the relatives, except it's fun to watch because they aren't my relatives. Diane Keaton heads a dream cast that includes Craig T. Nelson, Rachel McAdams, Claire Danes, Dermot Mulroney, Luke Wilson, and Sarah Jessica Parker.
The Holiday — Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet switch houses for the holidays. I found myself wanting to just spend Christmas with Winslet and Jack Black. Still, it's fluffy and fun and Eli Wallach has a great part, too, as an Old Hollywood script writer who takes a shine to Winslet.
Mixed Nuts — Definitely a mixed bag, Mixed Nuts is a comedy about a suicide-prevention hotline, set during the holiday season, and all of the crazy characters on both sides of the telephone. Steve Martin, Madeline Khan, Adam Sandler, Liev Schrieber, and Rita Wilson are all at their zaniest.
Labels:
Alan Rickman,
Bruce Willis,
Christmas,
Jack Black,
Kate Winslet,
movies
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
forget about Mildred, it's Guy Pearce for me
I just watched the last two episodes of Mildred Pierce. It was ... O.K. I 'm afraid that's how I usually feel about Todd Haynes's work. The set design and costumes were meticulous, but the rest was ... ho hum. Especially the too-long segments of Veda singing, or I should say, Evan Rachel Wood lip-synching (real coloratura is opera singer Sumi Jo).
I love Kate Winslet, and I applaud her characterization, but the bottom line is that Mildred is just as big a drip as her awful daughter Veda says she is — I don't care how long-suffering Mildred is. She's pathetic, not sympathetic. Veda is the monster that she helped create. They are two sides of a very bad coin. I'm convinced that no matter how many times they tell each other to "go to hell," ten minutes later Mildred will be full of regret and wanting Veda back. When Veda tires of Monty and dumps him and needs some cash, she'll just worm her way back into Mildred's life — for as long as it suits her.
But enough about the Pierce women. Let's get to Monty, who was truly the only bright point in the washed-out 5-part miniseries affair. Monty Beragon was played by Aussie actor Guy Pearce. He was the only person in the whole production who didn't seem to be playing 1930s-40s dress-up. He really, authentically, seemed to be part of the era, from the way he walked and talked to the way he lounged on the furniture. Someone needs to sign him up to play Errol Flynn's life story immediately, like yesterday, because he perfectly embodied the sexy 30s rake to a T. Wait a minute — apparently he already has played Flynn in a movie, about his early pre-Hollywood years. I'll have to track it down.
Pearce has been on my list of mad crushes for years — hell, I sat through The Time Machine
in the theater. I even find him incredibly sexy in The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert
. Of course he's insufferable in L.A. Confidential
, but in a good way. And Memento is just classic. But he's also been in some unexpected roles, big and small. Two Brothers
is an interesting little movie about two tiger cubs that are separated and what becomes of them. He's played Andy Warhol, Houdini and Edward VIII.
I still think Pearce is the perfect age and actor to be doing Flynn's autobiography, My Wicked, Wicked Ways
— that 80s TV movie version doesn't count. He does have an upcoming movie, The Wettest County in the World , in which he is co-starring with Gary Oldman, set in the 1930s, Depression-era. That's a start.
I love Kate Winslet, and I applaud her characterization, but the bottom line is that Mildred is just as big a drip as her awful daughter Veda says she is — I don't care how long-suffering Mildred is. She's pathetic, not sympathetic. Veda is the monster that she helped create. They are two sides of a very bad coin. I'm convinced that no matter how many times they tell each other to "go to hell," ten minutes later Mildred will be full of regret and wanting Veda back. When Veda tires of Monty and dumps him and needs some cash, she'll just worm her way back into Mildred's life — for as long as it suits her.
But enough about the Pierce women. Let's get to Monty, who was truly the only bright point in the washed-out 5-part miniseries affair. Monty Beragon was played by Aussie actor Guy Pearce. He was the only person in the whole production who didn't seem to be playing 1930s-40s dress-up. He really, authentically, seemed to be part of the era, from the way he walked and talked to the way he lounged on the furniture. Someone needs to sign him up to play Errol Flynn's life story immediately, like yesterday, because he perfectly embodied the sexy 30s rake to a T. Wait a minute — apparently he already has played Flynn in a movie, about his early pre-Hollywood years. I'll have to track it down.
Pearce has been on my list of mad crushes for years — hell, I sat through The Time Machine
I still think Pearce is the perfect age and actor to be doing Flynn's autobiography, My Wicked, Wicked Ways
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
mildred pierce
Article first published as Television Review: Mildred Pierce (2011) on Blogcritics.
The 5-part mini-series Mildred Pierce started Sunday on HBO, with the first two episodes airing back-to-back. The first episode and its star Kate Winslet start off quietly, but the tension and drama builds steadily. Winslet is strong and surprising as Mildred, a woman who has a core of iron that surprises everyone around her, sometimes including herself. She also has a blind spot — devotion to her older daughter Veda. She is in an unfulfilling marriage and it is clear that she is pouring all her unresolved hopes and dreams into her older daughter, as younger daughter ray is too young and possibly too much like her father to gain her focus.
Mildred's philandering husband Bert, played by Brían F. O'Byrne takes off, and she is left to support herself and their two daughters. Melissa Leo as a friendly neighbor with some not-so-savory advice suggests she might start marketing herself as a kept woman. When Wally (James LeGros), a business associate of her husband's, offers to take her out Lucy tells her to not let him buy her dinner but to cook for him, sleep with him, so he owes her. Mildred does just that — hard realty and Mildred's response to it was glossed over in the film noir Joan Crawford version
. In fact this telling of the story, apart from the basic plot structure is so different in every way that if I had ever intended to compare the two versions that pretty much disappeared by the end of the first scene.
Director and co-writer Todd Haynes is always good at period (Far from Heaven
). The colors in Mildred Pierce — muted pinks and greens and browns and yellows — can't hide all of the passion and frustration below the surface. Winslet is wonderful as the grass widow (a woman with an absent husband) who at first can't imagine becoming a waitress to support her daughters because she knows that they (read Veda) will be ashamed of her.
But as a woman in an employment office who is trying to help her get a job tells her, "Get over it." It's 1931, the height of the Depression. There are no jobs anywhere, but she can't bring herself to take the offered job as housekeeper to a rich woman who in their brief interview familiarly calls her Mildred when she insists on being addressed ad "Mrs. Pierce." Mildred has a crisis of conscious after refusing the job. When an opportunity presents itself while she is eating at a diner she offers herself up as a waitress and is hired on the spot. Waitress Ida (Mare Winningham) quickly sizes her up as unsuitable, but helps her get started. She is a tough broad, but she trains her well and you know they will become best buds soon enough.
In Part 2 errant husband Bert shows up again, delighting the kids and ticking-off Mildred, who takes the key to the car away from him. When he protests she tells him, "I got a job. Somebody had to." It's probably her first real feeling of power since he left.
We see her back at the diner, or "hash house" as Mildred calls it. She is already an old hand at the job. male customers try to pick her up and complain about the lousy pie, opening up an avenue for Mildred. She could bake pies for the diner. Of course her pies are a hit and with Ida's help she starts getting not only paid for her pies, but expands her modest "I sold 5 pies last week" to her neighbors to a production line of 35 pies a week for first her restaurant and then another.
But even with her working so hard and making money for piano and swim lessons for Veda her first-born shows herself to be a first-class bitch. Every kid snoops in their mother's stuff out of curiosity, but Veda has been spying on her mother with malicious intent for the purpose of humiliation. She discovers Mildred's uniform and has the housekeeper Mildred has hired to help out wear it and follow her around like a servant. As awful as her behavior is, Veda's snobbery may be the catalyst for Mildred to be brave enough to take the next step. She tells Veda she only took the job as a waitress so she can learn the restaurant business from the ground up. It may come to pass, but it felt like Mildred was improvising on the spot.
She tells Veda, "No matter what I say, no matter what anyone says, never give that up, your way of looking at things." Veda's response is "I can't Mother, It's how I am." Those two statements are the key to both of their characters and the whole story. Mildred does start to study her surroundings — the financial dealings of the owner, the waste of food. She continues to sleep with Wally, getting ready to call in her favor — an investment proposal for a restaurant. Wally does her one better and helps her find a property and get her a divorce.
On her last day as a waitress in walks dashing Monty Beragon to the diner and her life. Guy Pearce plays him with a sort of lazy Errol Flynn-like glamour. They make an instant connection and spend a sex-fueled weekend together, but Mildred's afterglow is cut short after arriving home when she is informed that Ray is in the hospital with a high fever.
[SPOILER ALERT — skip this paragraph if you haven't seen the episode yet.] Anyone familiar with the Joan Crawford film knows what's coming, but that doesn't make the death of younger daughter Ray any less affecting, or Mildred's co-dependent need to share her grief after coming home from the hospital after watching her youngest daughter die any less disturbing when she crawls into bed with sleeping daughter Veda. Mildred's problems and successes are just beginning and it is going to continue to be fascinating and heart-wrenching to watch.
The 5-part mini-series Mildred Pierce started Sunday on HBO, with the first two episodes airing back-to-back. The first episode and its star Kate Winslet start off quietly, but the tension and drama builds steadily. Winslet is strong and surprising as Mildred, a woman who has a core of iron that surprises everyone around her, sometimes including herself. She also has a blind spot — devotion to her older daughter Veda. She is in an unfulfilling marriage and it is clear that she is pouring all her unresolved hopes and dreams into her older daughter, as younger daughter ray is too young and possibly too much like her father to gain her focus.
Mildred's philandering husband Bert, played by Brían F. O'Byrne takes off, and she is left to support herself and their two daughters. Melissa Leo as a friendly neighbor with some not-so-savory advice suggests she might start marketing herself as a kept woman. When Wally (James LeGros), a business associate of her husband's, offers to take her out Lucy tells her to not let him buy her dinner but to cook for him, sleep with him, so he owes her. Mildred does just that — hard realty and Mildred's response to it was glossed over in the film noir Joan Crawford version
Director and co-writer Todd Haynes is always good at period (Far from Heaven
But as a woman in an employment office who is trying to help her get a job tells her, "Get over it." It's 1931, the height of the Depression. There are no jobs anywhere, but she can't bring herself to take the offered job as housekeeper to a rich woman who in their brief interview familiarly calls her Mildred when she insists on being addressed ad "Mrs. Pierce." Mildred has a crisis of conscious after refusing the job. When an opportunity presents itself while she is eating at a diner she offers herself up as a waitress and is hired on the spot. Waitress Ida (Mare Winningham) quickly sizes her up as unsuitable, but helps her get started. She is a tough broad, but she trains her well and you know they will become best buds soon enough.
In Part 2 errant husband Bert shows up again, delighting the kids and ticking-off Mildred, who takes the key to the car away from him. When he protests she tells him, "I got a job. Somebody had to." It's probably her first real feeling of power since he left.
We see her back at the diner, or "hash house" as Mildred calls it. She is already an old hand at the job. male customers try to pick her up and complain about the lousy pie, opening up an avenue for Mildred. She could bake pies for the diner. Of course her pies are a hit and with Ida's help she starts getting not only paid for her pies, but expands her modest "I sold 5 pies last week" to her neighbors to a production line of 35 pies a week for first her restaurant and then another.
But even with her working so hard and making money for piano and swim lessons for Veda her first-born shows herself to be a first-class bitch. Every kid snoops in their mother's stuff out of curiosity, but Veda has been spying on her mother with malicious intent for the purpose of humiliation. She discovers Mildred's uniform and has the housekeeper Mildred has hired to help out wear it and follow her around like a servant. As awful as her behavior is, Veda's snobbery may be the catalyst for Mildred to be brave enough to take the next step. She tells Veda she only took the job as a waitress so she can learn the restaurant business from the ground up. It may come to pass, but it felt like Mildred was improvising on the spot.
She tells Veda, "No matter what I say, no matter what anyone says, never give that up, your way of looking at things." Veda's response is "I can't Mother, It's how I am." Those two statements are the key to both of their characters and the whole story. Mildred does start to study her surroundings — the financial dealings of the owner, the waste of food. She continues to sleep with Wally, getting ready to call in her favor — an investment proposal for a restaurant. Wally does her one better and helps her find a property and get her a divorce.
On her last day as a waitress in walks dashing Monty Beragon to the diner and her life. Guy Pearce plays him with a sort of lazy Errol Flynn-like glamour. They make an instant connection and spend a sex-fueled weekend together, but Mildred's afterglow is cut short after arriving home when she is informed that Ray is in the hospital with a high fever.
[SPOILER ALERT — skip this paragraph if you haven't seen the episode yet.] Anyone familiar with the Joan Crawford film knows what's coming, but that doesn't make the death of younger daughter Ray any less affecting, or Mildred's co-dependent need to share her grief after coming home from the hospital after watching her youngest daughter die any less disturbing when she crawls into bed with sleeping daughter Veda. Mildred's problems and successes are just beginning and it is going to continue to be fascinating and heart-wrenching to watch.
Labels:
hbo,
Joan Crawford,
Kate Winslet,
Mildred Pierce,
mini-series,
television,
Todd Haynes
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