Mar. 5th, 2007 11:10 am
Weekend at a glance
Weekend summary
Friday: The Devil Wears Prada over leftovers withSaturday: Last couple episodes of Rome, first season. Two Ingrid Pitt Hammer horror films (The Vampire Lovers and Countess Dracula) and four episodes of Carnivàle, second season, chez
Sunday: Cubs vs. Sox Cactus League exhibition game at Nuphy's, followed by dinner at Joy Yee and two episodes of Carnivàle, first season.
Notes
The Devil Wears Prada e. was perfectly right about this movie: Any scene without Meryl Streep or Stanley Tucci is as superfluous as a sweater on a polar bear. (We rewound and rewatched her "cerulean" monologue at least three times.) Fast forward through them all and you've got a solid hour of entertainment. Trust me, you'll never miss the clichéd morality play that passes for a plot.Rome Late to the party again, aren't we? Nuphy lent us the first season boxed set and
Carnivàle Like I said.
The mise-en-scène is absolutely stunning: gorgeous, filthy, and 100% convincing. (Well, maybe 99%. I did find myself questioning at one point how a carnival trailer in 1934 could have electricity when I didn't see or hear any kerosene generators running outside.) At times, the grittiness verged on self-parody--there was much discussion in the peanut gallery Saturday night about Nick Stahl's status as the Dirtiest Leading Man Ever--but I found it refreshing to see rousties actually wearing the grease and sweat of someone who's been hustling in the sun for the past ten hours.
It's also wonderful to see so many trusted character actors getting juicy parts that they can really put something into. Every other face in this show is familiar to me from somewhere (kudos to Nuphy, btw, for identifying Fr. Norman as the father from The Waltons) which--rather than being distracting--only adds to the eeriness of the entire show.
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Then again, it sounds like you were really digging the whole mystic Dust Bowl aesthetic in the first place, in which case plot progression doesn't really matter as much.
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No offense, Da, but I take this recommendation about as seriously as you would one which advised skipping through the Falstaff scenes in Henry IV.
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