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Beltmann

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Everything posted by Beltmann

  1. Yesterday I sat down to watch the Letterman performance on my DVR, and was deeply disappointed to discover that twice the local station had technical difficulties that caused the picture to blank out for 30 seconds each time. I'll have to settle for YouTube, I guess.
  2. Even though it's slicker and more willing to exist as a genre picture, Atom Egoyan's remake of Nathalie... (2003) may actually improve upon the (very good) original--despite the new thriller elements, Egoyan still winds up mining deeper psychological territory.
  3. I'm still a bit hoarse from all the cheering.
  4. "You and I" in a Pick 'n Save grocery store last week.
  5. There's plenty of similar tactics among the fringes of both sides (which has always been true). The difference right now, though, is that one side has become far more willing to tolerate such rhetoric within their mainstream channels, too.
  6. Let me second this recommendation. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed it, and Christian McKay's expert channeling of Orson Welles makes it a must-see. I'm a big fan of Linklater, too--although I'd say only Before Sunset is a bona fide classic, and largely because it's such a spellbinding ode to the magic of good conversation. Its real-time eruption of language and emotion feels exactly like two old friends rediscovering each other. While his camera gently eavesdrops, Linklater draws poetic, thorny blossoms of talk from Hawke and Delpy, who surely deserve equal credit for the screenplay
  7. Really can't go wrong here. I've seen 13 Marx brothers features, and those are my two favorites. Night at the Opera is perhaps more unhinged, but Duck Soup has the benefit of a fairly serious war satire. Both, however, present the brothers at the height of their anarchical power. (After those two, their movies began to weaken, mostly because MGM unwisely tried to contain them in more conventional song-and-romance formulas.)
  8. Same here. I don't like giving gift cards because they don't show a lot of thought and they aren't fun to wrap or unwrap. But there's something to be said for giving a gift card rather than giving a present that has the potential to disappoint or go to waste. (I'd much rather get a gift card from my mom than another sweater that I will never, ever wear.) Side note: I read somewhere recently that about 30% of all holiday gifts are now gift cards / certificates.
  9. Was well enough to see a double feature today. The Fighter had a terrific sense of time and place, and the Coens' True Grit was surprisingly old-fashioned (I mean that as a compliment).
  10. The pic isn't showing up, but I'm assuming this is Let the Right One In, right? Definitely one of the best horror movies I've seen, mostly because it's so much more than just a horror movie. (I haven't seen the American remake, but it looks okay... I'll check it out eventually.)
  11. Sick in bed all day (I'm the last in the family to catch it, so it's been a pretty awful four days around here), but I managed to watch these two: I first learned about Temple Grandin in 2000, when she was the subject of an episode of First Person, Errol Morris' documentary TV series. The HBO movie is an engaging and curious version of her story--diagnosed with autism as a child in the 1960s, Temple still managed to go to grad school and become a famous animal behaviorist and inventor of humane treatments of livestock--and features a persuasive performance by Claire Danes. Liked it a
  12. Seconded. My best music experience of 2010 was attending a Jeff Tweedy LRS in July. After that, these were my five favorite shows: 1. Eels [opener: Jesca Hoop], October 2 at the Pabst in Milwaukee 2. Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings [The Heavy], May 22 at the Pabst in Milwaukee 3. The New Pornographers [The Dodos; The Dutchess and the Duke], June 12 at the Pabst in Milwaukee 4. The National [The Antlers], August 4 at the Riverside in Milwaukee 5. Heartless Bastards [Peter Wolf Crier; The Builders and the Butchers], July 26 at Turner Hall in Milwaukee The worst was probably The Gasligh
  13. I bought my father this book: Walk-Don't Run: The Story of the Ventures.
  14. I haven't been this giddy about a Wisconsin sports deal since Reggie White signed with the Packers. Things like this just don't happen to Brewers fans. We gave up a lot, but in my view the only painful loss was Lorenzo Cain. Does this make the Brewers a contender? I think it does. The Cards (who also upgraded) are still the team to beat in the NL Central, but the Brewers ought to be competitive and at least figure in a wild card hunt. Last year the Brewers had the 4th best offense in the NL; what ruined the Brewers was their miserable pitching, which was ranked 14th. Consider the 2009
  15. I'm a big Andrea Arnold fan, so I'm happy to see that Fish Tank is finally available in North America. It's not quite as solid as her previous works of social realism, but there's plenty to recommend it, including a terrific lead performance by Katie Jarvis.
  16. Similar things have happened to me several times. Once I turned down an invitation to serve on a film festival jury (Milwaukee) because it would have required being gone the weekend of my daughter's first birthday. No regrets, though; I was able to catch up with the films later, but you can't catch up with a missed milestone.
  17. I use Winamp with external drives at both home and work, and it has always worked beautifully.
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