yesterday I saw Knives Out, tonight Parasite.
Knives Out was fun.
Parasite I need to sit with for a bit. I mean, it was good. Really good, and it's gonna stay with me, but right now all I have is: yeah, that was a lot. Also there needed to be some acting awards there. Also vast income disparity is repugnant.
Also vast income disparity is repugnant.
There's a reason I called my year-end round-up of 2019 films What Is Your Capitalist Trauma?
I like your movie blog, megan.
I like your movie blog, megan.
Thanks, Zen. Right now it's pretty much all movies all the time but it occasionally becomes opera blog. It used to be a much better mix of books, film, and music. I need to get back to that at some point.
Just back from
1917.
It was incredible. The w
Two leads are subtle and compelling. Andrew Scott gave an amazingly rich and lived-in feel to his character during his short screen time. Roger Deakins is BRILLIANT.
Really enjoyed Little Women. I would like several of the capes, particularly Amy's
Finally saw
Ford v Ferrari
and quite enjoyed it. Really good structure, well paced, with terrific acting all around. Plus, it's always nice to see a good sports film that's not about baseball or boxing. I actually left it with a better appreciation of what high-level racing takes. It doesn't quite crack my top ten but I can see why it got the nominations it did.
Really good structure, well paced, with terrific acting all around.
Yep. It's just a solid, well-made and well-acted film, and I enjoyed it thoroughly even though I don't give two hoots about car racing.
Last night was Producer's Guild Award and 1917 won it for Best Picture, which is a good barometer for its Oscar chances. On a related note, Hahaha I love Rian Johnson.
Right now, my Oscar winner predictions go something like this:
Best Picture: 1917
Best Director: Bong Joon Ho (vs. Quentin Tarantino)
Best Actor: Joaquin Phoenix
Best Actress: Renee Zellweger
Best Supporting Actor: Brad Pitt
Best Supporting Actress: Laura Dern
Best Original Screenplay: QT for Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (vs Noah Baumbach for Marriage Story)
Best Adapted Screenplay: Greta Gerwig for Little Women
Best International Feature: Parasite
Best Animated Feature: Toy Story 4
Best Documentary: American Factory
Best Cinematography: Roger Deakins for 1917
Best Editing: Parasite
Best Production Design: Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
Sound Editing/Mixing: 1917 or Ford v Ferrari, maybe they'll split them since there are 2 awards
Original Score: Thomas Newman for 1917
Make up and Hair: Bombshell
Costume Design: Little Women (vs OUATIH)
OK, that's a complete shut-out for The Irishman, which doesn't sound quite right. Not sure which of my picks I'd push out to make room for it though.
I gotta admit, I haven't watched American Factory yet but I mostly want it to win for Best Doc so that Barack and Michelle Obama (who are producers for the film) could go up on the stage and give a rousing acceptance speech.
I follow Rian Johnson on Twitter (he's a fun follow if you ignore the occasional d-bags that still yell at him in his mentions for ruining Star Wars > 2 years later) and he just posted a photo of the gift he received from Danica McKellar (!) for mentioning her in Knives Out: [link]
That made me smile really wide. I *have* watched some of McKellar's TV movies -- haven't seen any thrillers, but she makes for a plucky and likable rom-com heroine. Also, happy as a clam that both Johnson and Daniel Craig are planning for a second Benoit Blanc movie!
On an unrelated note, NYT has an interview/oral history with the cast and crew on the making of Linklater's Before trilogy, which are some of my favourite films ever made: [link]
Talk about romantic poetry for Gen-Xers everywhere. Trying to imagine Michael Vartan (who was apparently the second choice) as Jesse breaks my brain a little. Who knows if he'd have had the same magical chemistry Hawke had with Delpy? We might not have had the 2nd and 3rd films.